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Svantek SV 106A Human Vibration Meter & Analyser

Svantek SV 106A Human Vibration Meter & Analyser

Price on request

As defined by ISO 8041, a Human Vibration Meter (HVM) is a device that uses a vibrational transducer, signal processor, and display to measure human response to vibrations. HVM is typically used in hand-arm vibration measurements to prevent HAVS. In whole-body, they are typically used for the calculation of Vibration Dose Value.

Svantek SV 106A Human Vibration Meter & Analyser

What is a Human Vibration?

Human vibrations are mechanical vibrations that are transmitted directly to the human body, affecting different tissues in different ways. There are three types of human vibrations:

  • hand-arm vibration (ISO 5349)
  • whole-body vibration (ISO 2631)
  • low-frequency whole-body vibration in the frequency range from 0,1 Hz to 0,5 Hz (ISO 2631)

 

Hand Arm Vibration Testing

Calculation of the daily exposure A(8)

The hand-arm vibration testing is based on the calculation of the daily exposure value normalized to an eight-hour reference period. This value is A(8), which is the square root of the sum of the squares (RMS) of the frequency-weighted acceleration values, determined on the orthogonal axes X, Y, Z defined in ISO 5349-1.

Vibration Dose ValueVibration Dose Value

Calculating VDV for whole-body vibration

The vibration dose value VDV is calculated using the fourth power of the frequency-weighted instantaneous vibration acceleration. The whole-body vibration daily exposure A(8) is calculated at the highest (RMS) value or the highest vibration dose value (VDV)

Types of Accelerometers

MEMS vs IEPE Accelerometers Types

ISO 8041 mentions two types of accelerometers – IEPE and MEMS. Their construction and operation are very different. In IEPE accelerometers, piezoelectric materials are used, while semiconductor fabrication facilities are used in MEMS. As a result, MEMS accelerometers are more shock resistant and do not have a DC shift effect. They also consume less power and have a flat frequency response down to DC.

 

Human vibrational frequencies

How do you measure human vibrational frequency?

According to ISO 5349 and ISO 2631, human vibrational frequencies are measured using unweighted frequency spectra to identify the vibration sources. Once it is installed, the data logger stores the information about 1/3 octaves with configurable logging intervals.

 

For more information: http://Svantek SV 106A

Svantek SV 106A Human Vibration Meter & Analyser

Svantek SV 106A Datasheet

Svantek SV 106A Human Vibration Meter & Analyser

 

SV 38V - Seat accelerometer for SV 106

SV 38V – Seat accelerometer for SV 106

Seat accelerometer for SV 106

SV 105C - Hand-Arm adapter with triaxial accelerometer for SV 106A

SV 105C – Hand-Arm adapter with triaxial accelerometer for SV 106A

Hand-Arm adapter with triaxial MEMS accelerometer for SV 106A

SF106_LIC_3 - License of 1/1 & 1/3 octave analysis for SV 106

SF106_LIC_3 – License of 1/1 & 1/3 octave analysis for SV 106

License of 1/1 & 1/3 octave analysis for SV 106

Svantek SV 106A Human Vibration Meter & Analyser

Human vibration measurements

 

The world’s reference human vibration meter

 

Looking for a human vibration meter and analyzer?

 

Vibration meter calibration

 

Additional information

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