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Patented Wrist Goniometer, Flexible Zero/Span Controls |
Position Measurement & Control - Issue 36
APPLICATION FOCUSPatented Goniometer Design Gives Accuracy, Flexibility, and Ease of Use Wrist Angular Displacement Measured By SpaceAge Control Position Transducers
Figure A1 - The wrist goniometer mounted on the right hand, illustrating the hand component and the forearm components. The forearm component includes the wrist band and the housing for the three SpaceAge Control position transducers. The hand component includes the elastic glove and hardware for attachment of the displacement cable ends. Photo credit: Liberty Mutual Research Institute for Safety. A recently-announced, patented wrist angle measurement tool ("wrist goniometer") uses three SpaceAge Control Series 174 position transducers to sense the complex motions of the human wrist. This device is documented in "A technique for estimation of wrist angular displacement in radial/ulnar deviation and flexion/extension" authored by Raymond W. McGorry, Chien-Chi Chang, and Patrick G. Dempsey of the Liberty Mutual Research Institute for Safety. An abstract of this paper is below. PAPER ABSTRACT: The development of a device and the derivation of a trigonometric solution that permits direct determination of wrist angular displacement in the flexion/extension and radial/ulnar planes is presented. System performance was quantified during a bench evaluation, and by comparison to an electromagnetic tracking system during a wrist-mounted evaluation with 16 subjects. The wrist-mounted evaluation was repeated with nine subjects to evaluate repeatability of the measurement system. The results indicate that the differences between angular displacement calculated using the goniometer were not signicantly different from the calibration stand, with errors of 0.70 ±0.64° in the flexion/ extension plane and 0.667 ±0.68° in the radial/ulnar deviation plane. In a wrist-mounted evaluation of the goniometer with the electromagnetic tracking system, errors of 0.59 ±0.51°and 0.89 ±0.95°, respectively, were found. Linear regression was used to determine the slope and intercept of the relationship between the goniometer and the electromagnetic tracking system for the nine subjects who repeated the evaluation. Paired t-tests for means found no significant differences (p < 0.05) for the slopes and intercepts of the repeated measures. The results suggest that the proposed device and algorithm provide an accurate measurement of wrist angular displacement in two planes, with a minimum of preparation or calibration. To obtain the complete journal article, visit the International Journal of Industrial Ergonomics. PRODUCT FOCUSElectrical Output Benefits of the Series 6 Position Transducers Broad Operating Temperature and Flexible Zero/Span Controls The Series 6 position transducers with a maximum range of 85 inches (2159 mm) are generating significant interest and sales. Why? A key reason is the unique benefits of the Series 6 voltage conditioner and the 4-20 mA electrical outputs. Some of these benefits include:
The Series 6 position transducers with the voltage conditioner and 4-20 mA outputs share these benefits:
APPLICATION CORNERErrors and Temperature Changes Q. I have a Model 150-0121 position transducer. What errors will I see with changing temperature? A. All standard analog-output SpaceAge Control position transducers use conductive plastic or hybrid potentiometers that should be used as voltage dividers (voltage measurement) and not rheostats (resistance measurement). As such, because the changing temperature is changing the material characteristics of the entire potentiometric element, there will be no errors due to temperature change from the potentiometer. However, thermal expansion will slightly affect the transducers mechanical parts. The largest component of this thermal change effect is typically the displacement cable. To learn more about this effect, which is generally negligible for most applications, see the Temperature Effect on Displacement Cable Length Calculator. ![]() Figure C1 - Metal displacement cable (wire rope) is typically the largest contributor to temperature-change error. This error is generally insignificant. NEWS YOU CAN USEPrevious Issue (Issue 35)
ISSN 1527-5108 Document Number S050V(040623) |