Digital Load Cells

The CD-LD series delivers RS-485 digital output with built-in A/D conversion, eliminating external signal conditioning. Canister-style construction supports capacities to 50 tons with individual cell addressing, remote diagnostics, and noise-immune long-distance cable runs up to 1200 meters.

Digital load cells installed under truck scale weighbridge for heavy capacity vehicle weighing
Digital load cells installed in a truck scale system for high-capacity, long-distance weight measurement using RS-485 output.

TL;DR — Digital Load Cells at a Glance

  • Nickel-plated alloy steel, hermetically sealed canister body
  • Capacities 1 to 50+ tons with RS-485 digital transmission
  • Built-in A/D converter, two-wire digital interface, individual cell addressing
  • Compensated temperature -10 to +40°C; operating -30 to +70°C
  • 150% safe overload; noise immune to EMI on long cable runs
  • Applications: truck scales, tank weighing, process control, mobile equipment
  • Ships from Illinois with NIST-traceable calibration and engineering support included

At-a-Glance Technical Summary — CD-LD Series

Capacity Range
1–50+ tons (multiple models)
Output Protocol
RS-485 digital (two-wire)
Built-in Converter
A/D integrated in cell
Safe Overload
150% of rated capacity
Material / Seal
Nickel-plated alloy steel, hermetically welded
Primary Applications
Truck scales, tank weighing, process control
Temperature Compensation
-10 to +40°C
Cable Length Advantage
Up to 1200 m with noise immunity

What Are Digital Load Cells

A digital load cell combines strain gauge signal detection with integrated electronics to convert mechanical load directly to a RS-485 serial output. Unlike analog mV/V cells that require external amplification and analog-to-digital conversion, the CD-LD builds the A/D converter inside the cell body. This architecture eliminates the need for a separate signal conditioning instrument in applications where digital data is the destination.

When load is applied to the CD-LD’s sensing element, four strain gauges in a full Wheatstone bridge detect the resultant stress. Rather than amplifying and transmitting the tiny differential voltage across long cable runs (where EMI noise accumulates), the CD-LD digitizes the signal at its source. The resulting RS-485 data stream travels noise-free across hundreds of meters to a PLC, weighing terminal, or data logger.

This direct-digital architecture delivers two major operational advantages. First, individual cells retain unique addresses on a single RS-485 bus, enabling multi-cell tank or truck scale systems to report weight from every load cell simultaneously without wiring harnesses or summing cards. Second, the inherent noise immunity of RS-485 allows cable runs to 1200 meters, compared to 10–50 meters maximum for analog mV/V in high-EMI industrial sites.

[IMAGE: Block diagram — CD-LD internal architecture showing strain gauge bridge, A/D converter block, RS-485 interface, and data transmission to PLC/terminal, 700×400px]

Digital vs. Analog Load Cells — Key Differences

Both digital and analog cells measure load using strain gauges, but diverge sharply in signal conditioning and EMI resilience. The table below captures the most significant practical distinctions for site engineers and system integrators.

Characteristic Analog (mV/V) Digital (RS-485)
Signal Type Passive millivolt-per-volt bridge Digital RS-485 serial protocol
Output Conditioning Requires external amplifier + indicator Built-in A/D converter in cell
Cable Run Distance 10–50 m before noise pickup Up to 1200 m with noise immunity
EMI Susceptibility High (shielding essential) Very low (differential pair + RS-485 standard)
Multi-Cell Summing Junction box or signal trim card Individual addressing on single bus
Corner Correction Manual adjustment or hardware trim Automatic in firmware
Remote Diagnostics Not possible Cell status, signal quality reported live
Installation Complexity Moderate (multiple wired junction boxes) Simple (two-wire bus topology)
Typical Cost/Cell $350–600 $480–800
Real-world scenario: A truck scale manufacturer in a facility with high-frequency servo drives and welding equipment encounters 30 mV of noise on analog cables despite shielding. Switching to a four-cell CD-LD digital setup eliminates the noise issue, reduces wiring from four shielded pairs to a single twisted pair, and allows diagnostics showing weight reported from each wheel in real-time.

Who These Load Cells Are For

Truck Scale Manufacturers & Integrators — Four or eight CD-LD cells on a single 1200-meter run eliminate wiring complexity. Individual cell addressing reports weight per wheel group for axle-by-axle diagnostics. Direct RS-485 connection to NTEP-certified weighing terminals avoids the cost and space overhead of signal conditioning boxes.
Tank Farm & Process Operators — Large cylindrical tanks mounted on four CD-LD cells report inventory weight to SCADA systems via a single RS-485 pair. The automated corner correction firmware balances load among cells, and remote diagnostics detect cell drift or wiring faults before they cause measurement errors.
Process Engineers & System Integrators — PLC-based weighing systems benefit from the CD-LD’s direct digital output. No indicator needed on the shop floor; weight data streams directly into a historian or ERP system. Multi-cell configurations on one bus simplify ladder logic and reduce I/O card requirements.
Mobile Equipment Manufacturers — Truck bodies, trailers, and agricultural implements with onboard weight displays use CD-LD cells networked through the vehicle’s main RS-485 backbone, sharing a single twisted pair to the cabin display. Built-in A/D eliminates the vehicle-mounted amplifier box, reducing weight and power draw.
Retrofit & Troubleshooting Projects — Existing truck or tank scales with noisy analog mV/V signals often upgrade to digital cells when calibrating or refurbishing equipment. The CD-LD’s noise immunity restores accuracy without rerouting cable through the facility.

Typical Applications

Truck Scales and Axle Weighing

Portable and permanent truck scales with four CD-LD cells (one per wheel group) connect via a single RS-485 cable to the vehicle or scale house. Each cell reports its weight independently, allowing the scale to balance load across the deck and calculate per-axle weight for legal-for-trade compliance. A single twisted shielded pair replaces four separate mV/V bundles, reducing installation labor and cutting spares inventory.

Tank and Hopper Weighing

Storage tanks sitting on three or four CD-LD cells continuously report weight to process control systems. The digital interface supports automatic corner balancing across all cells, eliminating the need for manual load adjustment or periodic recalibration. Remote diagnostics flag cell drift or cable damage before it affects inventory accounting.

Industrial Process Control and Batching

Batching systems for chemicals, food, and pharmaceuticals integrate CD-LD cells directly with PLCs, bypassing separate indicator hardware. Individual cell addressing enables mass balance verification across multiple hoppers on one RS-485 bus. Recorded cell-by-cell data supports regulatory compliance and traceability audits.

[IMAGE: Application schematic — tank mounted on 4 CD-LD cells, RS-485 cable to PLC, weight data flow diagram, 700×400px]

Mobile Equipment and Onboard Displays

Agricultural and construction equipment with integrated weighing systems mount CD-LD cells on hoppers or bodies. The built-in A/D converter and RS-485 output eliminate the need for vehicle-mounted amplifier modules, saving weight, space, and power draw. Data streams directly to cabin displays via the main control network.

Aeronautics and Aerospace Testing

Aircraft component testing, thrust measurement rigs, and structural fatigue test stands use digital load cells where long cable runs between test fixtures and control rooms are common. The RS-485 noise immunity is critical in aerospace facilities with high-power hydraulic actuators and electromagnetic interference from test equipment. Digital addressing allows multi-point load monitoring across wing spar test jigs or landing gear qualification fixtures without adding junction boxes at each measurement point.

How to Select the Correct Digital Load Cell

Capacity selection follows the same logic as analog cells: total applied load multiplied by a safety factor of 1.5 to 2.0. For truck scales, divide the legal maximum vehicle weight by four (or eight, for multi-axle configurations) and add 20% margin. For tank weighing, include the empty tank mass, multiply by 2× to account for uneven loading, then select the nearest CD-LD capacity.

The key decision point for digital vs. analog is site environment. If cable runs exceed 50 meters or the facility contains induction furnaces, servo drives, welding equipment, or high-current switchgear, digital cells eliminate noise issues that plague analog systems. Facilities with existing PLC infrastructure benefit from direct RS-485 integration, avoiding the cost of separate analog indicators.

Verify that your weighing terminal, transmitter, or PLC firmware supports RS-485 modbus or CANbus protocols. Transcell provides integration documentation for common platforms. If upgrading from analog to digital cells, confirm that corner correction logic is programmed into your control system; many analog scales rely on mechanical load balancing, while digital systems expect automatic electronic balancing.

Capacity example: A 30-ton truck scale needs 4 cells. 30,000 kg ÷ 4 = 7,500 kg per cell. Apply 1.5× safety factor = 11,250 kg. Select the CD-LD 15-ton (15,000 kg) model for safe margin without overspecification.

Model Specifications & Data Sheets

Transcell manufactures six digital load cell models spanning canister, column, and double-ended configurations. Each model integrates RS-485 digital output with built-in A/D conversion. Select the model that matches your capacity requirement, cable length, and communication protocol.

CD-LD V17.7 — Digital Canister

Zero Balance
±1.5% of rated output
Accuracy Class
C3 – C6
Data Transmission
RS-485 interface, two-wire dual communication
Data Refresh Frequency
80 Hz/s
Baud Rate
57600 bps
Operating Temperature
-10°C to +40°C
Cell Addressing Range
1–10 cells per bus
Safe Overload
150% of rated capacity
Insulation Resistance
≥2000 MΩ (50V DC)
Rated Excitation
9–12V
Protection Grade
IP68

Download CD-LD V17.7 Data Sheet (PDF)

CD V18.5 — Analog Canister

Rated Output
2.0 mV/V ± 10%
Zero Balance
±1% of rated output
Nonlinearity
±0.03% of rated output
Hysteresis
±0.03% of rated output
Repeatability
±0.03% of rated output
Creep
±0.03% of applied load
Temp Effect on Output
±0.002% of reading/°C
Temp Effect on Zero
±0.002% of output/°C
Cable Length
6 m (20.28 ft)
Safe Temperature Range
-10 to +70°C
Safe Overload
150% of capacity
Input Impedance
410 Ω
Output Impedance
350 Ω
Insulation Resistance
5000 MΩ
Rated Excitation
10V DC/AC (max 15V)

Download CD V18.5 Data Sheet (PDF)

CD-SD V19.6 — Digital Column

Zero Balance
±1.5% of rated output
Accuracy Class
C3 / C6
Data Transmission
RS-485 interface, two-wire dual communication
Data Refresh Frequency
80 Hz/s
Baud Rate
57600 bps
Cell Addressing Range
1–10 cells per bus
Safe Temperature Range
-10 to +70℃
Temperature Compensation
-10 to +40℃
Safe Overload
150% of capacity
Insulation Resistance
2000 MΩ
Rated Excitation
9–12V DC/AC

Download CD-SD V19.6 Data Sheet (PDF)

CD-SD2 V19.8 — Digital Column (Rev. 2)

Zero Balance
±1.5% of rated output
Data Transmission
RS-485 interface, two-wire dual communication
Data Refresh Frequency
80 Hz/s
Baud Rate
57600 bps
Cell Addressing Range
1–10 cells per bus
Safe Temperature Range
-10 to +70℃
Temperature Compensation
-10 to +40℃
Safe Overload
150% of capacity
Insulation Resistance
2000 MΩ
Rated Excitation
9–12V DC/AC

Download CD-SD2 V19.8 Data Sheet (PDF)

DBSQD V18.5 — Double-Ended Digital

Rated Output
300,000 counts
Nonlinearity
±0.03% of rated output
Hysteresis
±0.03% of rated output
Repeatability
±0.03% of rated output
Creep
±0.02% of applied load
Temp Effect on Output
±0.002% of reading/°C
Temp Effect on Zero
±0.002% of output/°C
Cable Length
13 m (42.65 ft) / 15 m (49.21 ft)
Max Output Distance
1000 m
Safe Temperature Range
-10 to +70°C
Safe Overload
150% of capacity
Rated Excitation
8V DC (max 8V)
Input Current
40 mA
Baud Rate
19200 bps

Download DBSQD V18.5 Data Sheet (PDF)

DBSQD2 V18.4 — Double-Ended Digital (Rev. 2)

Rated Output
60,000 counts
Nonlinearity
±0.03% of rated output
Hysteresis
±0.03% of rated output
Repeatability
±0.03% of rated output
Creep
±0.02% of applied load
Temp Effect on Output
±0.002% of reading/°C
Temp Effect on Zero
±0.002% of output/°C
Cable Length Options
4 m / 7 m / 15 m / 30 m
Max Output Distance
100 m
Safe Temperature Range
-10 to +70°C
Safe Overload
150% of capacity
Rated Excitation
6–12V DC
Input Current
Max 40 mA
Baud Rate
57600 bps

Download DBSQD2 V18.4 Data Sheet (PDF)

Installation & RS-485 Wiring Guidelines

Bus Topology and Termination

Multiple CD-LD cells connect via a single twisted-pair RS-485 bus. The data line (A, B) runs from the master control unit (PLC or terminal) to the most distant slave cell and back. Termination resistors (typically 120 Ω) install at both ends of the cable run to prevent signal reflections. Omitting or misplacing termination resistors causes bit errors, communication timeouts, and loss of weight data in high-speed systems.

Cable Specifications

Use twisted-pair shielded cable rated for industrial RS-485 environments. Solid #18 or #20 AWG conductors support runs to 1200 meters at 9600 baud; thicker wire (stranded #16) resists field flexing if the cable is disturbed during maintenance. Shielding connects to ground at the PLC end only, not at the cell end, to prevent ground loops that amplify 50 Hz hum.

[IMAGE: Wiring diagram — RS-485 bus topology showing PLC master, four CD-LD cells, termination resistors, shield grounding, 700×450px]

Address Configuration and Diagnostics

Each CD-LD cell ships with a factory-programmed address (typically 01–04 for a four-cell truck scale). Address configuration occurs at the control terminal or PLC before live operation. Remote diagnostics access cell status via RS-485: signal quality, A/D resolution margin, and any fault flags. A common field error involves assigning duplicate addresses to two cells, causing both to respond to queries and corrupt the data stream.

Grounding and Safety Considerations

The CD-LD’s hermetic seal isolates its internal electronics from moisture. However, the RS-485 shield and cell body should connect to the facility ground bus via a single point at the control system to drain any static charge. Do not run RS-485 cabling alongside high-voltage power lines or motor control cables; maintain 150 mm separation where crossing is unavoidable.

Standards & Calibration Considerations

Transcell manufactures the CD-LD series under ISO 9001 quality management. Every cell receives individual NIST-traceable calibration on dead-weight test stands before dispatch, with certificates documenting actual output at zero, 50%, and 100% capacity. This traceability chain is essential for processes governed by FDA 21 CFR Part 11, GMP, or legal-for-trade regulations.

For weighing systems intended as legal-for-trade instruments, the complete assembly (cell + indicator + cabling) must be certified to OIML R60 standards in your jurisdiction. The CD-LD’s high linearity and repeatability support Class C3 equivalent performance, but certification depends on indicator selection and installation quality. Consult Transcell engineering during system design to ensure regulatory compliance.

RS-485 communication conforms to EIA/TIA-485 electrical specifications. The CD-LD’s digital interface is not itself a legal measure; rather, the cell provides accurate weight data to the terminal or system that performs and reports the measurement. Many jurisdictions now accept digital weighing systems if the indicator is NTEP-certified and the load cells provide traceable calibration.

How Transcell Compares

CD-LD cells ship within 3–7 business days from the Illinois warehouse for standard capacities. Comparable imported digital cells quote 8–16 weeks lead time. For truck scale OEMs ramping production or plant engineers managing scheduled equipment replacements, that delivery speed translates to schedule reliability and reduced inventory carrying costs.

Every CD-LD includes NIST-traceable calibration and RS-485 integration documentation at no additional cost. Several competitors charge $300–500 per unit for calibration certificates or require a separate data sheet purchase. Transcell’s application engineering team responds to protocol questions, PLC integration requests, and capacity verification within 24 business hours, at no charge.

The CD-LD occupies a mid-tier price position relative to imported digital cells, with equivalent or superior specifications. Transcell has manufactured force and weight measurement equipment in the same Illinois facility since 1981, ensuring consistent quality and continuity of supply.

Request a Quote for Your Digital Load Cell Application

Tell us your capacity, cell count, and cable distance. Our engineering team will confirm addressing strategy, RS-485 protocol compatibility, and deliver pricing within 24 business hours.

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Related Products & System Components

Frequently Asked Questions

Can I mix analog and digital load cells on one system?
No. Analog mV/V and digital RS-485 cells require fundamentally different wiring and signal conditioning. Choose one type for a complete system. Upgrading a truck scale from analog to all-digital is straightforward if your indicator supports RS-485 input; retrofitting a mix creates signal integrity problems and data corruption.
What is the maximum RS-485 cable distance?
Up to 1200 meters at 9600 baud with proper termination and #18 AWG twisted-pair cable. Beyond 1200 m, use industrial-grade shielded cable or RS-485 repeaters to extend range. The advantage over analog mV/V (10–50 m maximum) becomes apparent in large facility layouts or outdoor scale installations.
How do I address four cells on a truck scale?
Each cell is factory-assigned an address during manufacturing (01, 02, 03, 04). When connecting to your weighing terminal or PLC, configure the master to query each address in sequence and sum the weights. The terminal firmware usually handles summing automatically. Consult Transcell or your indicator vendor for address programming steps specific to your equipment.
Do I still need an external indicator with digital load cells?
Not necessarily. If your PLC or system controller supports RS-485 Modbus input, it can read the cells directly and calculate weight in firmware. Many modern truck scale and tank monitoring systems communicate directly with CD-LD cells without a separate indicator. Older systems may require an intermediate converter (like the LCT-2) to translate RS-485 to analog output compatible with legacy hardware.

Application Engineering Support

Need help selecting a CD-LD configuration for your truck scale, tank monitoring, or process control system?

Our engineering team responds within 24 business hours with capacity guidance, RS-485 protocol verification, PLC integration support, and complete technical documentation.

Transcell Technology Inc. · Buffalo Grove, IL · Since 1981

+1-800-503-9180
sales@transcell.com