Hi Pete & Triembed,
My friend has a beta of the Joulescope and he says it works great. Also, 
Joulescope's creator Matt Liberty was on this week's Embedded podcast: 
https://www.embedded.fm/episodes/278
I'm going to buy one in the kickstarter for my own consulting work. I expect 
I'll be using it ~50% of any given year, and I'm happy to share it with others 
in the group too if scheduling works out.
-svec
    On Friday, February 15, 2019, 11:56:16 AM EST, Pete Soper via TriEmbed 
<[email protected]> wrote:  
 
   
I've been using a TI XDS110 (about $110) that has an "EnergyTrace" feature that 
can run standalone within TI's Eclipse-based Code Composer Studio. This allows 
measuring supply current to a target with programmable voltage. It will supply 
up to 100mA at 1.8 to 3.6 volts. The accuracy is +/-2% or +/-500nA at less than 
25mA and 5% from 25 to 100mA and I have an "extender" add-on (another couple 
hundred $) that stretches the current range up to (from memory) 800mA. The CCS 
IDE in this setting is just a huge Java GUI glop for enabling the XDS110 and 
slurping roughly 2k samples per second into a .csv file (and yes, it holds 
these bad boy sample collections in memory until the run is complete and this 
would be a major issue for monitoring for long periods of time if you don't 
happen to have 128 gigabytes of RAM in your  computer).  The XDS110 is only 
about $110 and has been extremely effective for what I've been doing, but I 
need something that measures an arbitrary power source with an arbitrary target.
 
 
There's a Kickstarter that's going live on the 19th offering a device called 
Joulescope that is passive: it measures whatever voltage and current is going 
to a target. It covers nine orders of magnitude from -1 to 15 volts and -1 to 
3A with  1.5nA resolution and 250kHz bandwidth. The software and front panel 
connector design is open source. For an in depth description of this by the 
creator here's an interview on embedded.fm.
 
 
My question is whether another TriEmbed person would like to share one of these 
with me. We can get one of the "earlybird" first production units for $400 so 
that would be $200 each. If you're interested in this, please email me direct 
(pete at soper dot us). I'm outside Apex and a long hike from everywhere, so 
this wouldn't be like sharing a lawnmower with a neighbor, but I'm not in a low 
power-centric business, so I wouldn't be in a position to use this thing for 
weeks or even months at a time (but I wish I had it today!). The production 
schedule is early June. The guy involved seems to have done his homework: there 
doesn't appear to be any development at all left  for him to do, just the 
production so it appears to be relatively low risk, but of course you can never 
tell.  So if you're seriously interested, let me know.
 
 Thanks,
 Pete 

 
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