Compound Count Analysis Object (Counting Procedures Option)

23.08.2021

You can use this analysis object to count two signals synchronously with some of the procedures described in DIN 45667. You can choose between sampling, maximum value and time-at-level count.

Class Division

The counting is based on the division of the value range of the load-time function (source data set) into discrete classes. To carry out this division, the object offers you various procedures. Essentially, the location of the class limits is specified in all of the procedures. The procedures only differ in the choice of parameters that you have to specify in order to set the class limits. The classes are formed as open-top intervals from the class limits specified, i.e. the lower limit is included into the class in each case. An exception is the top class, which also includes the top limit. Any values that lie above the top class or below the bottom class are not counted!

Selecting a suitable class division must be carefully planned, since only results that have been determined using the same class division can be directly compared. For the compound count, two signals are counted synchronously and the frequencies are counted in a matrix. The classes of the first signal are assigned to the rows of the matrix and the classes of the second signal are assigned to the columns. The result is thus a data matrix with a corresponding number of rows and columns.

Procedure, Factor N

The three procedures can be differentiated by the way they function in counting and in the result.

For the sampling count procedure, every nth value is taken from the source data set and registered in its class. For n equals 1, this corresponds to the Histogram Function. This function, however, works with open marginal classes, unlike the count.

For the maximum value count procedure, the highest of each n values from the source data set is counted in its class. For n equals 1, the maximum value count and the sampling count procedure both provide the same result.

For the time-at-level count, the time that the signal dwells in the respective classes is determined. For an equidistantly sampled signal, this corresponds to the absolute frequency in a class, multiplied by the sampling interval. You cannot, however, use the time-at-level count for non-equidistantly sampled signals.

Frequency

You can specify whether you would like to determine absolute, relative or percentage frequencies. The sum of the absolute frequencies must be equal to the number of values counted. This can be lower than the number of values in the source data set! For relative and percentage frequencies, normalization is to one or one hundred, i.e. the sum of the frequencies results in one or one hundred. If the signal contains void values, this is accounted for when the normalization takes place.

FPScript Functions Used

CompoundSamplingCount

CompoundMaximumValueCount

CompoundTimeAtLevelCount

See Also

Counting Procedures Option

Analysis Objects

DIN Count Analysis Object

Rainflow Count Analysis Object

DIN 45667

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