Wireless Data Transmission

Definition

Wireless data transmission is the technology layer that enables an EDxtreme electronic dynamometer to send live force readings to a remote device without a physical cable connection. The EDxtreme transmits measurement data via a radio frequency link [VERIFY: confirm exact protocol and rated range with DMS]. The data stream includes the real-time force reading and, in logging configurations, a timestamp for each recorded measurement. The receiving device — typically the Communicator II remote display — decodes the transmitted data and presents it as a numeric force reading. The EDxtreme also logs data internally regardless of wireless connectivity, ensuring data is not lost if the wireless link is temporarily interrupted.

Frequently Asked Questions

Why Wireless Data Transmission Matters

The safety case for wireless data is direct: operators who must physically approach a dynamometer to read its value are exposed to the hazards of the active operation. Wireless transmission removes that requirement. The compliance case is equally important: when force data must be logged continuously rather than read at intervals, wireless transmission enables automated capture that manual reading cannot provide.

How Dynamic Measurement Uses It

The EDxtreme's wireless capability, paired with the Communicator II, is DMS's complete solution for customers needing remote force visibility and logged data. DMS provides technical support for field setup and troubleshooting of the wireless system.

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