What are you using as null detector? Isn't the circuit a bit ill-defined during the switching? I wonder whether there's a time when only one of the resistors is connected. A DVM might not care much, but a more traditional null meter might not take it lightly, if instead of the expected few mV or uV, it sees a couple of Volt, even for a brief moment. Oh, I guess, that's what the diodes are there for.
I'm using either a HP3478a or a HP3457a, so yeah the point of the diodes was to clamp the output at ~600mV. The meters don't mind that so much, but they do tend to report overrange on the odd switch. I don't think I'd do that with a proper null meter.
Isn't it more common to toggle the polarity of the supply voltage? It won't assure that the balance is achieved, but at least show you which influence lingering thermal EMF has.
Yes, but I'm not really looking for the lingering EMF here, I'm more interested in balancing the bridge as best as possible.
Nice! A matching bridge is a handy thing to have, at least for a voltnutter. I've never built a dedicated one, but should. My preference would be to switch the DUTs, but it's probably OK to switch the reference side. Just switching voltage doesn't help- you have to reverse the relationship between the DUT side and the reference side, as I think you've done. People don't even recognize them today, but these are what used to be used for bridge work- https://www.worthpoint.com/worthopedia/vintage-leeds-northrup-electric-knife-535680819
The old engineering and metrology books show some commercial matching bridges, but I've never seen one in the wild.
Yes, I was aiming to only switch one side of the bridge to use that to set the reference side as closely as possible to dead center. I thought about switching the DUT side but figured at some point I might want to do something out of the ordinary with the 4 binding posts connected to some other piece of kit and figured it'd be more predictable to keep the polarity outside the box constant.
Now I've had some time to use it, I realise I've made a bit of a blunder. I set the pot up with the intention of roughly +/- 1000ppm for resistor matching. The reality is that isn't enough to get a balance on a set of 1% metal films, and its so wide that I'm trying to balance the pot between windings when centering the reference side for a comparison measurement. So it's too narrow to be useful for resistor matching and too wide to be accurate in centering the reference. I think I'll re-jig it to narrow it right down to allow accurate reference centering and use my decade box as the reference resistor for comparison matching. That'll get me +/- 10ppm on 10K metal films, which would mean I can narrow the adjustment down far enough to be useful for comparison measurements.
Still, that's why we do these things.
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So I re-worked the pot from near enough +/-1500ppm to +/- 118ppm. Much more usable for getting a good zero. I can probably wind it even lower, but I'll play with this for a while and get a feel for it.
In all reality with a 27V input I now can easily get centered within 1ppm on a 10K pair (so ~7uV). I only have to move around in my chair and I get more noise than that. I might have to try more of a low pass filter on the output.
This is actually pretty cool as it becomes frightfully easy to see (and to some degree measure) all the other factors that inject noise, instability and variability into the system.