Difference between revisions of "BW June 2015"
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− | 6/9: I ran one of my new versions of the LabVIEW program, but no prompt appeared for saving a data file, and the netBooter outlet did not turn on. I closed the program and ran it again, but error 10001 appeared again, meaning that LabVIEW had lost contact with the DAQ. I opened Instacal and it said the DAQ was on the board list but was not detected, so I had to unplug the DAQ and reconnect it to the USB port. | + | 6/9: I ran one of my new versions of the LabVIEW program, but no prompt appeared for saving a data file, and the netBooter outlet did not turn on. I closed the program and ran it again, but error 10001 appeared again, meaning that LabVIEW had lost contact with the DAQ. I opened Instacal and it said the DAQ was on the board list but was not detected, so I had to unplug the DAQ and reconnect it to the USB port. Instacal detected the DAQ and I calibrated it as "8 Single Ended." After that the LabVIEW program acquired data from the DAQ. |
The USB connector for the DAQ is white and is plugged in next to the blue connector for one of the netBooters. | The USB connector for the DAQ is white and is plugged in next to the blue connector for one of the netBooters. |
Revision as of 15:49, 9 June 2015
6/9: I ran one of my new versions of the LabVIEW program, but no prompt appeared for saving a data file, and the netBooter outlet did not turn on. I closed the program and ran it again, but error 10001 appeared again, meaning that LabVIEW had lost contact with the DAQ. I opened Instacal and it said the DAQ was on the board list but was not detected, so I had to unplug the DAQ and reconnect it to the USB port. Instacal detected the DAQ and I calibrated it as "8 Single Ended." After that the LabVIEW program acquired data from the DAQ.
The USB connector for the DAQ is white and is plugged in next to the blue connector for one of the netBooters.