Forgive me for chipping in, but isn't this just a process instrument with a process output of 4 to 20mA? - (0mA used to signal line break, like early telegraphs, I was led to believe).
The idea of 4 to 20mA output is that you can daisy chain a number of sensors and and analogue inputs on the same loop, as long as the device supplying the current has enough voltage (compliance) to supply all the other devices. Most process stuff works on 24-V, so that limits the number of devices on the loop.
If you want a voltage signal to read rather than current, the standard method is to put the 4 to 20mA through a precision resistor (500R for 0 to 10V, 250R for 0 to 5V - V=Ri, 0.020A through 500R is 10V)
The problem is that 500R or 250R at 0.1% tolerance are specialised beasts and cost a lot more than a bog standard 240R or 510R resistor.
If this is going into a "process", I would be using the precision resistors.
If the Labjack has a 0 to 5V input, use 250R, bearing in mind that your scaling is 1 to 5V corresponding to 0 to 100% process, with a 1V offset
The idea of 4 to 20mA output is that you can daisy chain a number of sensors and and analogue inputs on the same loop, as long as the device supplying the current has enough voltage (compliance) to supply all the other devices. Most process stuff works on 24-V, so that limits the number of devices on the loop.
If you want a voltage signal to read rather than current, the standard method is to put the 4 to 20mA through a precision resistor (500R for 0 to 10V, 250R for 0 to 5V - V=Ri, 0.020A through 500R is 10V)
The problem is that 500R or 250R at 0.1% tolerance are specialised beasts and cost a lot more than a bog standard 240R or 510R resistor.
If this is going into a "process", I would be using the precision resistors.
If the Labjack has a 0 to 5V input, use 250R, bearing in mind that your scaling is 1 to 5V corresponding to 0 to 100% process, with a 1V offset