Natural Frequency and Resonance Products and their sub-components, as well as packaging materials and structures possess what is called natural frequency.
A helpful way to think of vibration is in terms of sound. Though the audible frequency spectrum is higher than the transport vibration spectrum - sound is vibration.
When transporting products from one location to another, we use packaging materials and technologies to protect them from the various hazards present within the distribution environment.
During the engineering and package design phase - often, a shock data acquisition system like Lansmont’s Test Partner is used to measure and monitor drop testing response to provide quantitative test results.
Calibration delivers the confidence you need in your instrumentation and sensors - and the measurements you make with them, because even the most robust and reliable measurement systems can drift over time.
When SAVER shock and vibration data recorders are “on” and operational, they are continuously sampling the environment – never sleeping, never in a low-power mode.
All Lansmont SAVER products are full waveform devices. Additionally, all SAVERs utilize internal triaxial accelerometers, which means they measure acceleration in the three translational directions - X, Y, and Z. Another way of typically describing those directions are up-and-down, side-to-side, and front-to-back.
Our TruMotion Load Stability Tester is taking center stage in Virginia Tech's latest article, shining a light on advancements in trucking safety standards.