send link to app

Acceleration app for iPhone and iPad


4.8 ( 208 ratings )
Reference Lifestyle
Developer: Kevin Power
Free
Current version: 1.0.3, last update: 1 year ago
First release : 14 Dec 2021
App size: 27.8 Mb

Acceleration is special in two ways.

First, it processes the readings from your built-in accelerometers in real time to show only horizontal acceleration.

Second, it takes data directly from your built-in accelerometers, sidestepping built-in smoothing.

Created originally to help EV drivers who were concerned that their brake lights were coming on inappropriately during regenerative braking, it can also be used to display braking and acceleration performance.

Its a small app thats easy to use. You dont have to sign-in, there arent any ads and an internet connection isnt needed.

To use the app, set your device in one fixed place. Tap Calibrate to let the app find the size and direction of gravity.

Horizontal acceleration is now displayed.

When Record is tapped, for the next 13 seconds a scatter graph of calculated readings is displayed. Two green arrows let you increase or decrease the vertical scale of the graph.

By default, unsmoothed data from your accelerometers is used. Tapping the Smooth button continuously averages the last last ten readings. This helps to manage results.

To help check the correct function of brake lights during regeneration, the Lamp button displays a panel that changes from blue to yellow at 0.7m/s/s, and to red at 1.3m/s/s.

Upgrading will let you save your sets of data to look at later. You can also export full-sized pictures of graphs into your camera roll. However, apart from this, the free version of this app is fully functional.

This app takes raw data from the accelerometers - not the processed data provided by the operating system. When Calibrate is pressed, the magnitude and direction of gravity is measured, relative to the device. The app then continues to collect data from the accelerometers, mathematically projecting it onto the plane perpendicular to the original gravity vector.

It reports the magnitude of this projected vector.

This process produces a reliable result for horizontal acceleration, whilst making you aware of jitter and sensitivity.