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From: KostasB on 6 May 2008 11:10 Hi, I do not think that this device would solve your problem. This device allows you to synchronise over the Ethernet but you will still be acquiring timestamps from the Windows software clock( 1kHz). Some of the NI PXI controllers allow you to acquire timestamps at microseconds resolution when they run LabVIEW Real-time. The following link explains which controllers allow you access to a 1MHz clock and for which O/S. <a href="http://digital.ni.com/public.nsf/allkb/0C0A6EE528F85A6486256F6700061790?OpenDocument" target="_blank">http://digital.ni.com/public.nsf/allkb/0C0A6EE528F85A6486256F6700061790?OpenDocument</a> I hope that helps, KostasB NIUK Applications Engineering
From: willyhoops on 7 May 2008 03:10 What a strange forum. It took me fifteen minutes to find the reply button. I am have been waiting for a reply for so long but this answer looks very strange. Are you sure of this? Anyone else? Whats the point in having an accurate sychronised clock card in your machine if you can't read the time from it? Are you sure I can't use the C DLL to read the time in the device? I am talking about abandoning the Windows Clock and using the clock on this board via the C DLL. I looked at your article but I am not really sure what Lab View is. I just want to use the C DLL to read the clock. I have no other hardware etc that links to this and I am not really in a lab. I am just trying to get accurate timestamps in my code. I want to use NI-Sync and I don't know about Lab View.Message Edited by willyhoops on 05-07-2008 01:59 AMMessage Edited by willyhoops on 05-07-2008 02:01 AM
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