If you're going to be doing this often it may be profitable to get a book on system identification. I can't be sure because I haven't had to do it, but I'm pretty sure that system identification with time delay is an indirect enough process that there will be multiple ways to do it, each one being good in some particular set of circumstances.
On Sat, 2016-03-12 at 06:39 -0700, noguchi wrote: > Dear Mr.Serge, > > > Thank you for your advise. > > I didn't know that step should start from the beginning. > > If there is a scilab tool to identify transport delay and continuous time > transfer functions (Fist order delay, scond order delay, integral), it would > be nice. > > > Thanks. > > > Y. Noguchi > > > > -- > View this message in context: > http://mailinglists.scilab.org/Model-ID-of-First-order-delay-and-Dead-Time-Process-tp4033659p4033709.html > Sent from the Scilab users - Mailing Lists Archives mailing list archive at > Nabble.com. > _______________________________________________ > users mailing list > users@lists.scilab.org > http://lists.scilab.org/mailman/listinfo/users > > -- Tim Wescott www.wescottdesign.com Control & Communications systems, circuit & software design. Phone: 503.631.7815 Cell: 503.349.8432 _______________________________________________ users mailing list users@lists.scilab.org http://lists.scilab.org/mailman/listinfo/users