AT-2040 Application Guide

How to Calibrate a Charge Mode Accelerometer with the AT-2040

The AT-2040 Portable Vibration Calibrator can be used to manually verify or automatically calibrate charge output accelerometers by comparing the sensor under test to the built-in reference accelerometer.

Typical charge sensor checks

  • Charge sensitivity in pC/g
  • Reference vibration level
  • Sensor output response
  • Cable and mounting verification
  • Frequency response sweep
  • PDF and CSV report export
Charge mode sensor calibration

What the AT-2040 does during a charge accelerometer calibration

A charge mode accelerometer produces a charge output instead of a powered IEPE voltage output. During calibration, the AT-2040 drives its internal electrodynamic shaker at a controlled vibration level and compares the charge sensor output to the internal reference accelerometer.

The AT-2040 includes the required charge input signal path, allowing the operator to measure charge accelerometer sensitivity directly, typically in pC/g. This makes the AT-2040 useful for testing high-temperature accelerometers, charge-mode industrial sensors, and sensors used with external charge amplifiers.

AT-2040 charge input support

Input type Charge accelerometer
Typical sensitivity pC/g
Measurement type Acceleration
Available unit GS
Reports PDF and CSV
Before you start

Prepare the charge accelerometer, cable, and mounting hardware

Charge mode sensors are sensitive to mounting and cable handling. For best results, use the correct adapter, secure the sensor properly, and avoid cable movement during the test.

01

Check the sensor datasheet

Confirm the sensor sensitivity, connector type, mounting thread, operating frequency range, and recommended calibration amplitude before beginning the test.

02

Use the correct low-noise cable

Charge sensors should be connected with the proper low-noise cable or adapter. Cable movement can affect charge measurements, so route and secure the cable before running the test.

03

Use the short-handle wrench

Hold the reference accelerometer with the provided short-handle wrench while installing or removing the test sensor. This prevents twisting force from being applied to the shaker.

Connection

Connect the charge accelerometer to the AT-2040

Mount the charge accelerometer to the shaker reference platform using the correct stud or adapter. Then connect the sensor to the AT-2040 sensor input using the correct charge-mode cable or adapter.

Unlike IEPE sensors, charge mode accelerometers do not require an IEPE constant-current supply. The AT-2040 uses its charge input signal path to measure the sensor output and calculate charge sensitivity.

Connection checklist

  • Sensor mounted securely
  • Correct stud or adapter installed
  • Charge cable connected to sensor input
  • Cable secured to reduce movement
  • Charge channel selected
Manual verification

Manual charge sensor test

Manual mode is useful when you want to quickly verify one calibration point, troubleshoot a sensor, check a cable, or compare the sensor output at a specific frequency and amplitude.

01

Open Vibration Output

From the main menu, select Vibration Output.

02

Select Charge

Tap the Channel button and select Charge.

03

Use acceleration units

For charge accelerometer input, use GS as the vibration unit.

04

Set frequency and amplitude

Use the knobs or touchscreen entry fields to set the test frequency and target vibration level.

05

Start the test

Select Start and allow the vibration level to stabilize.

06

Read sensitivity

Review the live vibration and measured sensor sensitivity, typically shown as pC/g.

Measurement readback

What to watch during the test

During a charge sensor test, the AT-2040 gives the operator useful indicators that help confirm the sensor, mounting, cable, and vibration level are behaving correctly.

Live vibration

Shows the actual shaker vibration output in the selected acceleration units.

Sensitivity

Displays calculated sensor sensitivity, typically in pC/g for charge accelerometers.

Output level

Helps identify whether the shaker is approaching its output capability at the selected frequency and payload.

THD / displacement

Helps identify high distortion, excessive displacement, or operating conditions outside the best test range.

Automatic calibration

Run an automatic charge accelerometer test

For a full calibration or frequency response check, use the AT-2040 Sensor Test mode. The automatic test runs through stored test points, displays results in graph or table view, and saves the data to onboard memory.

1 Create or select the charge sensor setup.
2 Open Sensor Test from the main menu.
3 Select the manufacturer and sensor model.
4 Enter the sensor serial number.
5 Press Start to run the sweep.
6 Review graph or table results.

Automatic test records

The automatic test screen can show test status, reference reading, current step, deviation relative to the reference frequency, serial number, graph/table view, and Start/Stop control.

When the test is complete, the results are saved onboard and can be exported later from the Reports screen.

Test setup guidance

Typical charge accelerometer calibration setup

Exact test points should be based on the sensor datasheet, customer requirements, and your laboratory procedure. A common approach is to verify charge sensitivity at a reference frequency and then sweep additional frequency points.

Setup item Typical choice Why it matters
Sensor type Charge accelerometer Selects the correct charge input path and sensitivity units.
Reference frequency Often 100 Hz or customer-defined Used as the main sensitivity reference point.
Amplitude Commonly 1 g, unless otherwise specified Keeps testing repeatable and comparable to prior records.
Units GS Charge accelerometer input measures acceleration.
Output format PDF certificate and CSV data Supports customer records, quality systems, and further analysis.
Charge vs IEPE

Charge mode sensors are different from IEPE sensors

Both sensor types are accelerometers, but they use different electrical interfaces. Selecting the correct channel is required for the AT-2040 to read the sensor correctly.

Feature Charge accelerometer IEPE accelerometer
Output type Charge output Voltage output with DC bias
Typical sensitivity pC/g mV/g
AT-2040 channel Charge IEPE
Sensor power No IEPE current source required Requires IEPE current source
Cable sensitivity Use proper low-noise cable and avoid cable motion Less sensitive to cable motion than charge mode
Reports

Export calibration results

After the charge accelerometer test is complete, the AT-2040 stores the result in onboard memory. Reports can be recalled and exported as PDF or CSV files for documentation, review, or customer delivery.

Report outputs

  • PDF calibration certificate
  • CSV measured data
  • Sensor serial number
  • Frequency points
  • Charge sensitivity results
  • Deviation and phase data when applicable
Important calibration note

Pass/fail decisions are controlled by your lab procedure

The AT-2040 provides the measured charge sensitivity data, deviation, phase information, and calibration records. It does not force a universal pass/fail decision because laboratories may use different tolerances, uncertainty budgets, and decision rules.

When issuing a statement of conformity, apply your own ISO 17025 decision rule or the decision rule requested by your customer.

Troubleshooting

Common charge accelerometer calibration problems

No sensor response

Confirm the Charge channel is selected, the sensor cable is connected, and the cable or adapter is correct for charge mode measurement.

Unstable sensitivity

Check sensor mounting, adapter tightness, cable routing, and cable movement. Charge measurements are more sensitive to cable handling than IEPE measurements.

Amplitude limit warning

Reduce the vibration level, check the payload weight, or use a different frequency point. Shaker output limits depend on frequency and sensor mass.

Need help with charge mode calibration?

Agate Technology can help you set up the right AT-2040 workflow.

Whether you are verifying one charge accelerometer at a time or building an automated calibration process, the AT-2040 can support manual testing, automatic sweeps, PDF certificates, and CSV export.

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