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A key characteristic of 3D force sensors is crosstalk: applying a force also triggers a measurement in the two unloaded axes. Thanks to several compensation mechanisms (mechanical and electrical), crosstalk is typically less than 3% of the nominal load. Crosstalk is reproducible and proportional to the amplitude of the applied force. By applying an additional compensation matrix, crosstalk in all axes can be reduced to a maximum of less than 1%.
By default, you receive two factory calibrations, each with two measurement points:
one without a compensation matrix (“cv”) and one with extended matrix compensation (“s”).
For detailed proof of the sensor's linearity, you can optionally extend the calibration to 4 or 6 measurement points:
This ensures your sensor is optimally calibrated to your application from the very first measurement.
A key characteristic of 3D force sensors is crosstalk: applying a force also triggers a measurement in the two unloaded axes. Thanks to several compensation mechanisms (mechanical and electrical), crosstalk is typically less than 3% of the nominal load. Crosstalk is reproducible and proportional to the amplitude of the applied force. By applying an additional compensation matrix, crosstalk in all axes can be reduced to a maximum of less than 1%.
By default, you receive two factory calibrations, each with two measurement points:
one without a compensation matrix (“cv”) and one with extended matrix compensation (“s”).
For detailed proof of the sensor's linearity, you can optionally extend the calibration to 4 or 6 measurement points:
This ensures your sensor is optimally calibrated to your application from the very first measurement.