How to Build a Circuit for a Linear Hall Effect Sensor?

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To build a circuit for the Honeywell CSLA2EL linear Hall effect sensor, it requires a power supply of 8-16V, ideally using a 7812 regulator for 12V DC input. The sensor outputs a voltage proportional to the current in the loop, with an AC output for AC current inputs. The null output offset voltage at zero current is approximately 6V ± 0.6V. Useful resources include various datasheets that provide pinout and electrical characteristics, which can be found through dedicated links. Proper calibration is essential for accurate current measurement.
chudiandeyu
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Hello
I recently bought a linear Hall effect sensor for measuring current, but I don't know how to make the circuit to measure the current, could anybody help me with this? Please tell me the circuit.
By the way, I use the linear Hall effect sensor CSLA2EL by Honeywell.
Thank you very much!
 
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Wow, that's not easy...the first google link I got was labeled "datasheet" but I couldn't find any electrical connection information on it.

But I found a bunch of other datasheets here:
http://www.datasheets.org.uk/CSLA2EL-datasheet.html
and one has a pinout buried deeply in the noise. Now I forget which link I clicked and followed and interpreted, but you should be able to find it too...

It looks like they take a power supply of 8-16v and put out a voltage that is proportional to the current in the loop.
 
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I think this is the datasheet for the Hall effect sensor in the unit. The calibration is in terms of the Gauss field in the toroid gap.

http://sccatalog.honeywell.com/pdbdownload/images/91ss12-2.pdf

See attached pdf for some info on electrical characteristics of current sensor Hall effect holder toroid.

[added] The performance specs for the Hall effect sensor are for operating with a 12 volt dc input. I suggest using a 7812 3-pin regulator. The Hall effect sensor output is an ac output for an ac current input. The null output offset voltage for zero current input is 6 volts ± 0.6 volts. The output appears to be an npn transistor current-sourcing emitter.

Bob S
 

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Charlie Scott said:
This pdf (CS Series Linear Current Sensor Holder Assemblies) is really useful.
Thanx bob,
http://www.halleffectsensor.org/

This is almost a necropost spam post, but the link is actually pretty useful and on-topic for this old thread.
 
So I know that electrons are fundamental, there's no 'material' that makes them up, it's like talking about a colour itself rather than a car or a flower. Now protons and neutrons and quarks and whatever other stuff is there fundamentally, I want someone to kind of teach me these, I have a lot of questions that books might not give the answer in the way I understand. Thanks
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