Strain gauge made out of PCB

github.com

115 points by dr_coffee 7 days ago


fake-name - 3 days ago

The challenge is that while you can make a strain gauge out of just about anything, making them repeatable over temperature, humidity (in the case of hygroscopic materials, like PCB FR4) and repeated flexing is where it gets difficult.

For this, while I'm sure it works, if the humidity and/or temperature changes, the same deflection will result in different readings.

If you can calibrate it immediately before each use, or you don't care about absolute values, this is a completely valid option.

"Real" strain gauges generally use a constantan resistive element to deal with the temperature variability, deposited on a plastic carrier film (typically polyimide). The film elements then get glued to the stress sensing member. They're fairly inexpensive too.

knotimpressed - 3 days ago

For a long time I've been trying to make a DIY milligram-accurate scale, and milligram-accurate strain load cells are expensive. Does anyone know if the resolution of this is high enough?

rolph - 3 days ago

Piezoelectric or Strain Gauge Based Force Transducers?

https://www.hbkworld.com/en/knowledge/resource-center/articl...

Piezo vs. strain gauge https://www.kistler.com/US/en/piezo-vs.-strain-gauge/C000001...

amelius - 3 days ago

Can anyone explain why the BRIDGE_SUPPLY voltage is connected to the voltage regulator output and PWM signal at the same time (through the FSA5157L6 analog switch)?

amelius - 3 days ago

> Thinner boards will result in a smaller output voltage swing.

For the same weight? I would expect the opposite.

curtisszmania - 3 days ago

[dead]