Chapter 3
Making Signal Connections
©
National Instruments Corporation
3-7
Isolation Voltages
The positive and negative (DIG+ and DIG–) terminals of each channel
are isolated from the other input and output channels, from the +5 V and
GND pins, and from the computer power supply. Isolation barriers provide
isolation up to 60 VDC or 30 VAC (42 V peak) between any two terminals,
except between the two terminals making up a single digital I/O channel.
Do not exceed 60 VDC or 30 VAC between any two terminals of the
6527 device, including:
•
any two digital I/O (DIG+ or DIG–) lines of separate channels
•
any DIG+ or DIG– line and the GND or +5 V lines
•
the DIG+ line and the DIG– line of any output channel
Do not exceed 28 VDC or apply any negative or AC voltage between the
DIG+ and DIG– terminals of any input channel.
Warning
Do
not
exceed the isolation voltage limits. Exceeding the voltage limits can lead
to injury. National Instruments is
not
liable for any damage resulting from signal
connections that exceed these limits.
Optically Isolated Inputs
On a 6527 device, I/O connector pins 1 through 48, shown in Figure 3-1,
represent the optically isolated input signal pins.
Input Channels
The optically-isolated inputs of a 6527 device contain a light-emitting
diode (LED), a resistor for current limiting, and digital filtering and
change-detection circuitry. The 6527 boards offer 24 channels of isolated
digital input. Each channel has its own positive and negative terminals.
Always apply the higher voltage, if any, to the positive terminal. The
maximum input voltage (V
IN
) on these channels is +28 VDC.
Caution
Never apply a voltage to the positive (DIG+) terminal of any input channel that
is lower than the voltage on the channel’s negative (DIG–) terminal. National Instruments
is
not
liable for any damage resulting from incorrect signal connection.