Digital multimeters

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Offline Grainger49

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Reply #15 on: November 22, 2010, 12:33:29 PM
Set it on ohms and touch the two leads together.  It probably will not read zero because meters are sensitive enough to measure the resistance of the wire in the leads.  But what you read should be below one ohm.  Consider whatever you see as zero.

Then you need to measure the voltage on a battery.  A new D cell should be 1.56V on the DC voltage scale.

To check AC you have to be very careful.  Don't touch the metal on the meter leads.  The most convenient way is to measure the voltage at your socket.  But it can kill you if you do that wrong.  That shouldn't be a surprise but it is a warning.  Most outlets will have between 120 V to 130V on the AC scale. 



Offline denti alligator

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Reply #16 on: November 22, 2010, 12:36:42 PM
Wait, so HOW do I measure the AC at a socket?

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Offline Grainger49

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Reply #17 on: November 22, 2010, 01:00:34 PM
Carefully....

You put the probes into the two vertical holes that your power plugs go into.  Remember this is dangerous.  If the meter measures DC well it will most likely be fine on AC.  So the safest thing to do is not measure the AC till you are building a kit.  Then you can safely measure the heater winding first.  That should be 6.3V AC.
« Last Edit: January 30, 2013, 03:35:40 AM by Grainger49 »