National Instruments Introduces New Vibration Measurement Software

Noria news wires
Tags: vibration analysis, condition monitoring

National Instruments recently announced the latest version of its NI Sound and Vibration Measurement Suite software, which provides a comprehensive collection of analysis and signal processing tools for noise, vibration and harshness (NVH) testing, machine condition monitoring (MCM) and audio test applications. Engineers can use the suite as stand-alone software or combine it with NI hardware and NI LabVIEW system design software to simplify test system development and control. With its new vibration data-logging functionality and other enhancements, the Sound and Vibration Measurement Suite 2011 helps engineers to more easily customize and automate any MCM or NVH test or monitoring application.

"The NI Sound and Vibration Measurement Suite is an integral part of our MCM applications," said professor Jay Lee, director of the National Science Foundation's Industry/University Cooperative Research Center for Intelligent Maintenance Systems at the University of Cincinnati. "The suite has tremendously reduced system development time and has helped us achieve a variety of efficiencies throughout our machine analysis process."

The Sound and Vibration Measurement Suite 2011 simplifies the development of MCM, NVH and audio measurement systems with several new features, including a ready-to-run data-logging virtual instrument that makes it possible for engineers to save data continuously or based on specific criteria such as triggers or time. Engineers can configure the data logger and run it as long as necessary for a variety of sensor types, including accelerometer, tachometer and proximity probes.

The measurement suite also includes the Sound and Vibration Assistant, a stand-alone software module for quickly acquiring, analyzing and logging acoustic, noise and vibration data. Additionally, the Sound and Vibration Measurement Suite provides easy-to-use application examples for impact test and swept sine analysis. These enhancements for the 2011 version add flexibility and high-performance capabilities to a variety of sound and vibration measurement projects.

By integrating with LabVIEW, the Sound and Vibration Measurement Suite 2011 helps engineers increase test throughput with advanced parallel processing capabilities, among many other advantages of LabVIEW. LabVIEW 2011 can dramatically increase development efficiency through new engineering-specific libraries and its ability to interact with almost any hardware device. Together, LabVIEW and the Sound and Vibration Measurement Suite 2011 help engineers integrate individual measurement types into a single, reconfigurable platform so they can do their jobs faster, better and at a lower cost.

For more information about the Sound and Vibration Measurement Suite 2011, visit www.ni.com/soundandvibration.