Digital sensors are becoming increasingly common in modern metrology. They provide faster and more reliable measurements than analog sensors, but what makes them so effective?
How a digital sensor works
A digital sensor measures, for example, temperature or humidity and sends finished readings directly to your instrument or data logger. Unlike analog sensors, which send a continuous signal that the instrument itself must interpret, digital sensors deliver already processed information. The result is faster, more stable and more reliable readings.
Practical benefits
Easier integration: Instruments automatically identify the transducer and receive ready-made values, minimizing sources of error and simplifying measurements.
Flexibility: Digital sensors make it easy to use multiple sensor types in the same instrument and switch between them.
Easy tracking: Each sensor has a unique serial number and receives its own calibration document.
Non-stop calibration: You can send the transducer in for calibration without sending the whole instrument away - just replace the transducer and measurements can continue as normal.
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