SLYA048B March 2020 – June 2021 FDC1004 , FDC1004-Q1 , FDC2112 , FDC2112-Q1 , FDC2114 , FDC2114-Q1 , FDC2212 , FDC2212-Q1 , FDC2214 , FDC2214-Q1 , LDC0851 , LDC1001 , LDC1041 , LDC1051 , LDC1101 , LDC1312 , LDC1312-Q1 , LDC1314 , LDC1314-Q1 , LDC1612 , LDC1612-Q1 , LDC1614 , LDC1614-Q1 , LDC2112 , LDC2114 , LDC3114 , LDC3114-Q1
Incremental encoders can go on knobs to detect an increment or decrement of the knob's position (volume knob). Absolute encoders keep track of the exact position of the knob even when the device turns off (temperature knob on stove).
Common applications include: knobs on appliances (washers, dryers, refrigerators, stoves), fan speed counting, and gear tooth counting in industrial applications. Other applications include volume dials on personal electronics.
Event counters are used to detect the speed and calculate the coarse position of motors, fans, flow meters, or gears. Alternate solutions may be costly due to material costs and not robust in dirty environments.