Section 8.  Operation 
 
 
measurements.    The first measurement determines the range to use.    It is made 
with a 250 µs integration on the ±5000 mV range.    The second measurement is 
made using the range determined from the first.    Both measurements use the 
settling time entered in the SettlingTime parameter.  Auto-ranging optimizes 
resolution but takes longer than a measurement on a fixed range because of the 
two-measurement sequences. 
An auto-ranged measurement will return NAN ("not a number") if the voltage 
exceeds the range picked by the first measurement.    To avoid problems with a 
signal on the edge of a range, AutoRange selects the next larger range when the 
signal exceeds 90% of a range. 
Use auto-ranging for a signal that occasionally exceeds a particular range, for 
example, a type-J thermocouple measuring a temperature usually less than 476 °C 
(±25 mV range) but occasionally as high as 500 °C (±250 mV range).   
AutoRange should not be used for rapidly fluctuating signals, particularly signals 
traversing multiple voltage ranges rapidly.    The possibility exists that the signal 
can change ranges between the internal range check and the actual measurement. 
 
 
 Analog Voltage Input Ranges and Options 
Range Code  Description 
mV5000 
measures voltages between ±5000 
mV 
mV2500
1
 
measures voltages between ±2500 
mV 
mV250
2
 
measures voltages between ±250 mV 
mV25
2
 
measures voltages between ±25 mV 
mV7_5
2
 
measures voltages between ±7.5 mV 
mV2_5
2
 
measures voltages between ±2.5 mV 
AutoRange
3
 
datalogger determines the most 
suitable range 
1
 Append with C to enable common-mode null / open-input detect and set 
excitation to full-scale (~2700 mV) (Example: mV2500) 
2
 Append with C to enable common-mode null / open-input detect (Example: 
mV25C) 
3
 Append with C to enable common-mode null / open-input detect on ranges ≤ 
±250 mV, or just common-mode null on ranges > ±250 mV (Example: 
AutoRangeC) 
 
 
Input Limits / Common-Mode Range 
Related Topics: 
 •  Voltage Measurements — Specifications   
 •  Voltage Measurements — Overview
 (p. 65)   
 •  Voltage Measurements — Details
 (p. 345)