A
Archimedes' Lever
Guest
On Thu, 12 Nov 2009 18:26:26 -0800 (PST), Proteus IIV
<proteusiiv@gmail.com> wrote:
The meter READS the inrush signature, you idiot. Not create it.
<proteusiiv@gmail.com> wrote:
On Nov 11, 3:11 am, notme <no...@notme.org> wrote:
Fluke clamp current meters have 2 features that seem similar: peak and
in-rush. The older models have Max (some: Peak). The recent advent in Fluke
clamps is "In-rush".
How do these differ? Isn't in-rush current the short, max current at
motor-turn on? Shouldn't meters with a Max feature capture this accurately?
Compare, for example, my old Fluke 36 (Max):
http://assets.fluke.com/manuals/36______iseng0000.pdf
and the 334 (In-Rush):
http://us.fluke.com/VirtualDemos/330shock.asp
(click "Explore" then "Selection Guide").
How do Max & In-rush differ? Only in the marketing department?
Or is there a real-world difference?
Thanks,
Dave
THERE IS NO IN-RUSH APPLICABLE WITH CLAMP ON METERS
WHAT ARE YOU A TROLL FISHING FOR COX TOO ?
I AM PROTEUS
The meter READS the inrush signature, you idiot. Not create it.