I like the idea but choosing a spec to attain is the hard part.
I wanted to do this myself a few times, but I end up thinking.. do I want 2.5 or 4.5 digits on x-y-z range. what kind of voltage range is useful.... noise floor, update rate...
you can design 50 different systems all useful for something.. BUT HOW DO YOU CHOOSE A DESIGN?
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and then.. how do you choose a design for sale? thats even harder....
this sounds useful for maybe green energy people... I think this would be a broader market then just electronics hobbyists. But then you might also want clip on measurement.
Alot of people are interested in temperature trends. Not so many people are interested in electrical trends. For AC power logging these is alot of options already. Not to mention the dangers of designing this stuff.
It seems that quite a bit of green sources make reasonably low voltage things appropriate for a meter that won't have CAT certifications and stuff.
Also it would not make you crazy trying to design for nano ampers and stuff that hard core electronics people are interested in. why can't it measure high frequency nanovolts?
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This is assuming you want to make money. I have yet to design something to sell, only to satisfy personal curiosities.
From a hunch, if you want to sell near the price of the T400, which is 165$, with four channels, you won't be raising the bar in terms of any kind of measurements, making it difficult to appeal to a volt/time/current nut, as cheap electronics have gotten precise enough that measuring drift is difficult.
A portable unit with its own batteries might be useful for drone power monitoring, green energy, MAYBE some automotive stuff (i don't know cars). Also maybe for monitoring the behavior of machinery like CNC machine/3d printer/etc, if it samples enough .
A bench top current logger without outstanding capability would probobly be relegated to measuring battery drain.. which you only need one channel for. And probobly a uCurrent to hook up to it
(business opportunity for a combo sale with dave jones lol). Plus lots of people are starting to get dummy loads now.
ANd selling something designed to hook into mains without the extensive safety testing just seems like a bad idea.
I have a FLUKE HYDRA DAQ.. I have yet to use it yet, and I have a fairly sophisticated interests... the main reason being that its resolution is not high enough to be useful to me.
Plus, for high speed measurement, there are tons of portable oscilloscopes out on the market. Not to mention regular bench top oscilloscopes are getting more and more channels cheaper, making it less and less appealing to have a separate unit.
What I don't see alot of is long term measurement devices that are light and have long lasting batteries.
I also think that the thing that people are asking for in this thread does not fit in with the marketing model that you have for your T400 (i.e. its useful for many many things, from bbq chicken to making moonshine vs its good for measuring power supply stability and battery drain). A big selling feature of your T400 is the data card.. a data card is not useful in a electronics laboratory when you are prototyping or repairing. It would just slow things down. It would only be useful for some kind of burn-in test but who is doing that? the mentality is "it works".
Using this forum for market research will contaminate your data with volt-nuts like myself
the last thing you want is "hackaday" to post a "hack" where you turn your oscilloscope time base wayyy down and plug a ucurrent into it to make a data logger instead of buying your product.
another interesting use for a data logger would be just general thing to connect transducers to, i.e. portable instrumentation package to put on a balloon/roof/mountain top/something