R
Ralph Mowery
Guest
In article <uer5hr$iuap$1@solani.org>, alien@comet.invalid says...
When working I often used a Fluke t-1000. That was a good test meter if
you do not need too much resolution. It is almost blow out proof. I
often put it on the ohms scale and put it across fuses on a 480 volt 3
phase system that was under power.
I do not recall the number of it, but liked to use one of the Flukes
that just had a row of LEDs. You could put it across a live circuit
and if under power it would light up the leds to indicate how much
voltage and if no powre but low ohms another led wold light.
Yea, I do not keep it connected for any length of time though...
And PMT circuits do not have a high current capability.
I blew up a nice digital one that was accidently on the Ohms range a few weeks ago
I expected the chip was dead, but investigation found just a 900 Ohm SMD resistor open circuit.
I replaced it by 680 and 220 Ohm in series... Reading is perfect again...
How I found out it should be 900 Ohm? divider circuit measured (with an other meter of course)
90 ? 9000 etc, so that in-between range had to be be 900.
When working I often used a Fluke t-1000. That was a good test meter if
you do not need too much resolution. It is almost blow out proof. I
often put it on the ohms scale and put it across fuses on a 480 volt 3
phase system that was under power.
I do not recall the number of it, but liked to use one of the Flukes
that just had a row of LEDs. You could put it across a live circuit
and if under power it would light up the leds to indicate how much
voltage and if no powre but low ohms another led wold light.