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#1
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Hi Paul,
Don't expect any great tolerance for over voltage or over current from a 410C! There is no fuse to protect the current shunt from such abuse. Over voltage on the DC range is fairly safe because there is a 1M resistor at the DCV probe tip. It will keep fault current down. It is usually safer to use some expendable shunt, and a voltmeter for such measurements. -Chuck Paul Sanchez wrote: Thanks, Chuck. I'm planning to only use it for ma/tube current. I keep blowing up digitals with inadvertant probes. Do you know how "sensitive" these are to these inadvertant slips? Thanks again. "Chuck Harris" wrote in message ... The use of a 410C requires some care, particularily on the AC range. The metal bodied AC probe contains a vacuum tube diode that is sensitive up to 700 MHz. Further, its case is at chassis ground. Ohms, and DC ma are read using the common and ohms/ma lead set. Only DC is measured with the special DC probe. -Chuck Paul Sanchez wrote: I got a nice looking, recently calibrated(21001) HP 410C VTVM. I've been spoiled too long with digital meters. Which probes do I use for measuring DC current? Also, unfortunately, it doesn't read any AC voltages beyond 300v(design limits). Thanks -- No Tubes? You Lose! www.redironamps.com |
#2
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On Thu, 07 Aug 2003 16:04:59 GMT, "Paul Sanchez"
wrote: I got a nice looking, recently calibrated(21001) HP 410C VTVM. I've been spoiled too long with digital meters. Which probes do I use for measuring DC current? Also, unfortunately, it doesn't read any AC voltages beyond 300v(design limits). Thanks You don't have the AC capacitive divider then? Probably a rare item these days. I used to measure the PEP output of 10 KW sideband transmitters with one. |
#3
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My 2 cents:
Best meter for measuring DC curent via shunt method is the Simpson 260 "P" series A 260-7P is the one I use. I have 2 here at my shop and have been using for 8 years or so. The P series has an overload relay that kicks out a breaker on the front panel of the meter when you accidentally short the probe. All you need to do is reset the breaker button. I haven't changed a fuse in this meter ever! It takes two batteries and I don't think I have ever had to change either of those either - in 8 years! It also has a higher DC & AC range than typical DVM's which is very handy from time to time. The accuracy is not quite what a DVM might be but again - for the current shunt breaker feature alone - in the few cases that I have compared to a DVM it has been very close to the money and is certainly accurate enough when you considder having to pull that little plastic thing off the back of your Fluke again, to change the special sized fuse in there - a pain in the ass. Get the 260 you won't regret it. TS "Paul Sanchez" wrote in message m... I got a nice looking, recently calibrated(21001) HP 410C VTVM. I've been spoiled too long with digital meters. Which probes do I use for measuring DC current? Also, unfortunately, it doesn't read any AC voltages beyond 300v(design limits). Thanks -- No Tubes? You Lose! www.redironamps.com |
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