About Dickson Data Loggers If maximum flexibility in how and when you analyze data is paramount, a Dickson Data Logger is your recording instrument of choice. Dickson Data Loggers monitor and record critical environmental conditions – temperature, humidity, pressure, or other electronic signals. Logged sample points are stored on a Dickson Data Logger’s hard drive for later download to a PC or laptop. Dickson’s wireless data loggers even do this downloading automatically! Dicksonware software makes it easy to view data in graphical or tabular form and export it to whatever data analysis applications you choose. Reliable – Accurate – Stable – Easy-to-Use The data loggers that Dickson manufactures are designed to make critical data capture worry-free. Because Dickson offers the widest variety of data loggers available in the world, you get to choose the logger features that are best-suited for your application. Do you want the convenience of graph-at-a-glance data loggers that enable you to monitor conditions as you walk by? Do you want the convenience of wireless data loggers that handle data downloading automatically and also help you avoid all wiring issues? Small as a coin? Watertight? With multiple alarms? Easy data mobility with FLASH memory cards? Yes, all these features and more are available to answer all your application needs. (Click here for the Data Logger Selection Guide.) How to Choose a Data Logger 1. What variable(s)
are you monitoring? 2. What range are you
monitoring? 3. How often to you need
to collect data? Sample Rate is a user selectable feature that lets you determine how frequently the data logger takes a reading. Some data loggers let you sample every second, while others start sampling at every 10 seconds in 10 second increments. Depending on your application you might only need a sample every 10 minutes to monitor storage conditions, while process monitoring and testing might require continuous detailed sampling every second. Sample Storage is the number of samples that can be stored in a data logger's memory before it needs to download or begins to write over old data. Depending on how often data is downloaded and upon the sample rate selected, you may require a logger with a large sample storage capacity. For example, a single channel data logger that stores 32,512 sample points that is set to a sample rate of one minute will run for 22.5 days before the memory is full. If the same data logger is set to a sample rate of every 5 minutes, it will run for 112 days before the memory is full. 4. Where will the data
logger be placed? 5. Do you need to spot
check data without downloading?
6. Additional features to consider:
Wireless, Networked, or Standalone? |