PC/104 sine reference oscillator card introduced by DDC for military, avionics, and ground-vehicle test systems

March 15, 2011
BOHEMIA, N.Y., 15 March 2011. Data Device Corp. (DDC) in Bohemia, N.Y., is introducing the SB-36350CX series PC/104 sine reference oscillator cards for military and industrial test systems, aircraft avionics, ships, displays, robotics, and ground vehicles. The conformal-coated card has a high-efficiency transformer isolated output to drive high-inductive loads, and offer software-programmable voltage and frequency, along with short-circuit protection.
BOHEMIA, N.Y., 15 March 2011. Data Device Corp. (DDC) in Bohemia, N.Y., is introducing the SB-36350CX series PC/104sine reference oscillator cards for military and industrial test systems, aircraft avionics, ships, displays, robotics, and ground vehicles.The cards are conformal coated and operate in temperatures from -40 to 85 degrees Celsius. Each card has a high-efficiency transformer isolated output to drive high-inductive loads. The SB-36350CX cards have software programmable voltage and frequency, along with short circuit protection.A sine-wave oscillator produces sine waveforms as references or test waveforms, which may function as device inputs, with the output harmonics measured to determine levels of distortion. The sine-wave oscillator can generate uniform signals used as references in applications like communications systems, audio, function generators, and digital systems.

Benefits of the DDC SB-36350CX card include 5-volt-ampere sine output; software programmable voltage and frequency; direct drive high inductive loads without an amplifier; and short circuit protection.

For more information contact DDC online at www.ddc-web.com.

About the Author

John Keller | Editor

John Keller is editor-in-chief of Military & Aerospace Electronics magazine, which provides extensive coverage and analysis of enabling electronic and optoelectronic technologies in military, space, and commercial aviation applications. A member of the Military & Aerospace Electronics staff since the magazine's founding in 1989, Mr. Keller took over as chief editor in 1995.

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