Electronics > Beginners
Can measuring over limit with DC amp clamp wreck it?
Superkryptonite:
Hi guys
I bought a Uni-T UT210E AC/DC amp clamp (love this thing), which says it's rated to a maximum of 100A DC.
If I put it around my cars battery terminal let's say during startup, it will definitely be drawing more than 100A...will that wreck the amp clamp/ruin it's accuracy in the future? Or it just won't read properly? Obviously I won't be making a habit of doing things like that but accidents happen.
Thanks!
floobydust:
Overloading a hall sensor will not wreck it, say if you hit it with 300A cranking.
But I found with Agilent clamp-on meters, big DC currents the jaws get magnetized and then the meter cannot read low currents properly. It gets stuck reading an offset with hysteresis. Not sure how the Uni-T handles that. Like the meter gets stuck reading 30mA and putting in a wire with 10mA doesn't match both directions.
I just demagnetize the jaws afterwards and all is OK. So you might notice that needs to be done afterwards.
Superkryptonite:
--- Quote from: floobydust on November 06, 2019, 03:05:00 am ---Overloading a hall sensor will not wreck it, say if you hit it with 300A cranking.
But I found with Agilent clamp-on meters, big DC currents the jaws get magnetized and then the meter cannot read low currents properly. It gets stuck reading an offset with hysteresis. Not sure how the Uni-T handles that. Like the meter gets stuck reading 30mA and putting in a wire with 10mA doesn't match both directions.
I just demagnetize the jaws afterwards and all is OK. So you might notice that needs to be done afterwards.
--- End quote ---
Thanks. How do you go about demagnetizing the jaws?
floobydust:
It's the same way you demagnetize anything - An AC current through a solenoid coil with fade out. I use a cassette tape head demagnetizer but those are from the Jurassic era, on each open jaw end. :-[
You have to fade out the AC magnetic field to get the residual flux as low as possible. Slowly moving the solenoid further away.
You could put a few wire loops in and measure AC current in a heater or something.
It's only if you notice the jaws are magnetized (paper clip sticking lightly) and the readings seem low or sticky.
Other people might have better methods.
Kleinstein:
The clamp meter should not be so difficult to demagnetize. Just an AC current relatively close to the maximum (could be multiple turns to get more effective current) and may be a slightly smaller current should be sufficient. It has to handle smaller current with no problem, so no real need to fade down that much.
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