dBm/dBc Measurements
Shock pulses from the bearing are propagated through the material and picked up by the transducer. It converts the shocks to electric signals, which are processed to provide a carpet value and a peak value.
The shock pulse meter counts the rate of occurrence (incoming shock pulses per second) and varies the measuring threshold until two amplitude levels are determined:
- dBc (decibel carpet value): The shock carpet level (approx. 200 incoming shocks per second)
- dBm (decibel maximum value): the maximum level (highest incoming shock during the measuring time); Using a blinking indicator or earphones, a peak value can be established by increasing the measuring threshold until no signal is registered
* The effect of rolling velocity on the signal is neutralized by entering rpm and shaft diameter as input data, with 'reasonable accuracy'. This sets an initial value (dBi), the starting point of the 'normalized' condition scale.