Vibrating Wire Units of Measurement
1. Introduction
This article outlines the units of measurement used by Soil
Instruments. These include hertz, linear and period readings and what
the units are actually showing
2. The various units of measurement
The measurement of vibrating wire instruments is the frequency of oscillation of the wire.
This is measured by the Data Recorder as the number of oscillations per second or hertz (Hz)
This unit of measurement is not linear in relation to the change in
strain of the wire, so the Hz reading is often linearised by squaring
and dividing by 1000 to give the unit F²/1000 also called linear or
digits.
Another unit for measuring the frequency is Period, this is the length
of time taken for one oscillation to occur and is measured in seconds.
Typically for vibrating wire instruments this value is very small, so
it is multiplied by 10^7 to give a four or 5 digit number.
Hz and Period require more complex formulae in order to convert the frequency readings into engineering units.
Soil Instruments recommends using the F²/1000 units displayed and
stored by the Data Recorder for all readings and conversion into
engineering units.