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Load Cell Terminology

Across
A measure of an amplifier's ability to increase the amplitude of a signal , such that the output is greater than the original input.
A unit of force defined as that required to give a mass of one kilogram an acceleration of one metre per second per second. 1kgf = 9.80665N.
A random change in output under constant load conditions.
A fixed reference line referring to a single orientation of applied load.
The resistance of the LOAD CELL circuit measured at the excitation terminals with no load applied and with the output terminals open-circuited.
Loads that change rapidly, often bidirectionally (ascending and descending); examples include moving vehicles, machine vibration, wind gusts
The erroneous output that results in one axis as a result of loading in another separate orthogonal axis . Common in multi-axis loadcells due to the unavoidable mechanical coupling between the sensing elements.
The voltage applied to the input terminals of the load cell
Down
The algebraic difference between OUTPUT at a specific load and the corresponding point on the straight line drawn between MINIMUM LOAD and MAXIMUM LOAD. Normally expressed in units of %FS. It is common for characterization to be measured at 40-60 %FS.
A permanent change in the no load output
A calibration function stored within an instrument. Expressed as rated load x resolution (for example 500 x 0.1kgf indicates 5000 steps of 0.1kgf resolution within a 500kgf rated load).
The change in length of the load cell along the primary axis between no-load and rated load conditions, with all other mechanical influences remaining constant; usually expressed in inches or millimeters.
The algebraic difference between the indicated and true value of the load being measured.
The direction of load. tension & compression are each one mode.