A 15KW, 0-80V 0-250A power supply. Weighs about 35Kg and I'm scared of it.
I would also be scared if I had a 15 KILOWATT power supply in my house...
Just wondering, what are you going to use it for? Multimeter destruction, maybe?
One moderately crusty Tek 536 with B, CA, G and T plugins. No idea how functional it is yet, have to round up a suitably rated variac, check some caps and suss out a vaporised resistor before I try to power it.
The SDG2082X I ordered came yesterday and I've had a great time playing with it. I didn't know what I was missing not having a signal gen. The frequency counter on it is decent as well with 8 digits of accuracy (only 7 shown here, but 10M shows as 10.000 000) unlike the 6 that most scopes provide, and it has a ppm measurement feature as well. Here it is connected to my RFTG Rb GPSDO. It is 0.160 ppm off.
The SDG2082X I ordered came yesterday and I've had a great time playing with it. I didn't know what I was missing not having a signal gen. The frequency counter on it is decent as well with 8 digits of accuracy (only 7 shown here, but 10M shows as 10.000 000) unlike the 6 that most scopes provide, and it has a ppm measurement feature as well. Here it is connected to my RFTG Rb GPSDO. It is 0.160 ppm off.
Alan i hope you got it with a discount.
Siglent just lost same amount of credability as VW , and VW's stock dropped 30%
/Bingo
Alan i hope you got it with a discount.
Siglent just lost same amount of credability as VW , and VW's stock dropped 30%
I got the usual and very fine tequipment discount! it is my first signal gen, but I am very pleased for the money so far.
I have a feeling that Siglent's misstep will be forgiven when people see the value this unit has. I think the SDG2042X could very well become the "DS1052E" of its time in terms of bang for the buck in siggens.
I think the SDG2042X could very well become the "DS1052E" of its time in terms of bang for the buck in siggens.
Only if it is hackable to 120 Mhz or even more.
Wow! It even comes with a card!
An old myford lathe, sometimes the british didn't do silly stuff with lumps of metal.
Just finished wiring up a 3 phase vsd and new 3/4 hp motor to replace the old washing machine drive unit.
Cheaper to use an existing mould set ( no cost for tooling, and they only have to pay for a new screen for the printing) and the case already had all the cutouts aside from the one they had to make a jig to drill out the zero adjust knob. Jig would be a drill press and a wooden set of angles that they place the meter top in and bring the drill down. I made a similar one to do larger punch holes in some card backing boards, as the supplier made them 1mm too small, and the new posts we had were too tight a fit. We were not going to throw away 10k of boards, so took a cheap drill press and bought a 1/4in hole bit to drill them out. Took a week to do the lot in spare moments.
UA6013L. What a bizarre meter. Does it have some kind of servo inside to do the "auto range"?
The 3 probe jacks seem to be split between one that's 200mA fused and one with a max 35VDC? That variable REL feature looks handy
I guess it may read high'ish capacitance, though no accuracy specifications so it could read any old rubbish.
I guess the backlight and reading hold are much sought after features, and the little header between to get round those pesky IEC1010 safety rated jack sockets.
Garry, what possessed you to buy this POS?
Has anyone realised that the meter is on when the switch is in the off position? Talk about possessed!
Has anyone realised that the meter is on when the switch is in the off position? Talk about possessed!
That would be stray capacitance causing ghost voltages. The meter must be using this phantom power to try and turn the servo for its auto-ranging.
Garry, what possessed you to buy this POS?
Erm ok.
!. I live close to scouseland where shiny things and bright things are a must have.
2. I got it cheap and wanted to take a look at it, that and I couldn't afford better and I couldn't make my mind up what to get that week, I needed a quick fix for my junkie collector side.
Yeah, it looks like Uyigao are using the same design for many of their meters:
UA6243L - Digital LCR meter
UA33 multimeter series (B, C, D) (interestingly, there's no A version on the Internet)
Cheaper to use an existing mould set ( no cost for tooling, and they only have to pay for a new screen for the printing) and the case already had all the cutouts aside from the one they had to make a jig to drill out the zero adjust knob.
Looks like the hole is already on the rest of the meters as a power button... or a torch?
I bought a Uyigao temp gun recently (a few pages ago), the plastics are pretty nice, feels solid. Great device for USD 15 delivered.
!. I live close to scouseland where shiny things and bright things are a must have.
2. I got it cheap and wanted to take a look at it, that and I couldn't afford better and I couldn't make my mind up what to get that week, I needed a quick fix for my junkie collector side.
I live IN scouseland and wouldn't have this, but a tear down and review is in order!
I'm guessing it is at least fast at measuring large capacitors in the mF range?
For a nice cheap excellent little meter with capacitance that actually does autorange go for a UT136B, and when you need another quick fix a week later get the UT136C so you have a temperature probe version too
Oh and you must have one of the Atmel 328 based "$20 LCR ESR transistor testers" by now? Open source - huge thread on here.
!. I live close to scouseland where shiny things and bright things are a must have.
2. I got it cheap and wanted to take a look at it, that and I couldn't afford better and I couldn't make my mind up what to get that week, I needed a quick fix for my junkie collector side.
I live IN scouseland and wouldn't have this, but a tear down and review is in order!
I'm guessing it is at least fast at measuring large capacitors in the mF range?
For a nice cheap excellent little meter with capacitance that actually does autorange go for a UT136B, and when you need another quick fix a week later get the UT136C so you have a temperature probe version too
Oh and you must have one of the Atmel 328 based "$20 LCR ESR transistor testers" by now? Open source - huge thread on here.
yep i have an At328 unit. was looking at the UT one earlier, but also the atlas ESR Range. One day when I get mega rich i might buy a hp E4981A ....
An early Christmas present!!!
I need a set of those so I can talk to myself in complete privacy, I hear it's the first sign of
All three of us, me myself and I, problem is I never hear anything I haven't heard before!