Create or sign in to your account for the best pricing!

Your account pricing is now applied.

Toggle Nav
Search
My Cart

Data Acquisition

We can't find products matching the selection.

Types of Data Acquisition Equipment

Data acquisition equipment is used to collect, record, and review measurement data over time. It can support troubleshooting, performance verification, and documentation when you need more than a single spot reading.

  • Multi-channel data acquisition units are used to capture several inputs at once.
  • Data logging tools are designed for trend monitoring and repeatable reporting.
  • Systems intended for integrating sensors and collecting readings for analysis workflows.

For electrical trend tracking specifically, compare power monitoring. For spot checks that don't require logging, multimeters may be sufficient depending on the task.

Key Selection Criteria for Data Acquisition Equipment

  • Number of channels and input types required for your measurements.
  • Sampling rate and resolution appropriate for the signals you need to capture.
  • Sensor compatibility and any required accessories.
  • Storage duration, data export format, and review workflow.
  • Software requirements for configuration and analysis.

Selecting a solution that fits your measurement type and workflow helps support consistent logging and clearer troubleshooting.

Frequently Asked Questions

What is data acquisition used for in industrial applications?

Data acquisition is used to record measurement data over time for troubleshooting intermittent issues, validating performance, and documenting results across one or more inputs. If the focus is on electrical behavior, power monitoring may also be relevant.

How do I choose the right channel count and sampling needs?

Start with how many sensors or signals you need to record and how quickly they change. Then compare sampling rate and resolution based on the level of detail required for analysis. For signal troubleshooting and waveform detail, compare oscilloscopes.

When is data logging more useful than spot measurements?

Data logging is useful when conditions change over time, when issues are intermittent, or when you need documented trends rather than a single reading. For quick electrical checks, electrical testers or multimeters are common starting points.