I bought a chinese galvo set and showcard and being the curious individual I am decided to probe the outputs. On my kit I read the following:
x (there is a three prong connector labeled "+, gnd, -". "gnd and -" are tied together): -5v to +5v
y (there is a three prong connector labeled "+, gnd, -". "gnd and -" are tied together): -5v to +5v
red (two prong connector labeled (+ and gnd): 0v to +5v
green (two prong connector labeled (+ and gnd): 0v to +5v
blue (two prong connector labeled (+ and gnd): 0v to +5v
shutter (two prong connector labeled (+ and gnd): 0v to +5v
After probing these, I looked up the ILDA standard online and found this:
http://www.laserfx.com/Backstage.Las.../Pinouts9.html
After reading this, I'm rather confused!
For x and y signals:
I see they are are able to vary a total of 10v (in other words, 10v peak to peak) and gnd is supposed to be in the middle of the range. This leads me to believe the max voltage in relation to ground should be +5V and the min should be -5V... so in otherwise, this is a bipolar analog signal.
1. If this is truly the case, how can this chinese board get away with tying GND to the - pin? It works.. but it doesn't seem proper? What is the downside to this setup?
2. I have searched the forums regarding this before posting and some people say you should see an overall 20v swing. Are they confused themselves, or am I missing something important?
For r, g, b, and shutter signals:
3. It says it is a unipolar signal that is able to vary 5v (in other words, 5v peak to peak).. but if it is a unipolar signal, why is gnd expected to be in the middle of the range (thus the max signal voltage should be 2.5v and the min be -2.5v)? I just don't get this, especially given all lasers and shutters I have been tinkering with expect 0-5v ranges where 0v = gnd.
Can someone clarify this for me. I'm getting a headache just thinking about this![]()