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Fluke 87V & 28II problem at the ohms range .
Kiriakos-GR:
Well I just discover an true problem with the Fluke 28II by comparing it with the Agilent U1272A and the Fluke 8050A (bench top) .
And the problem is that the Fluke 28II adds 100mOhm on the 600 Ohms range , because it just does so .
The same thing was happened also at my Fluke 87V and now I know why … because it just does so too.
And why it did bother me ? simply because all those tests that I did on test leads and their tiny resistance,
I was getting an a resistance of 00.15 when I was crossing the leads and I was believing that the meter was saying the truth .
But no it was not !!
The true resistance was 100mOhm less.
And in this example would be 00.050 that is just 50mOhm
I did a simple test by measuring the inner resistance of my own Resistors decade box .
With a fixed set of cables with bananas at the ends.
And the numbers that I got from them : ( with No REL) (cables & switches & bridges)
Fluke 28 II ……………. 0.15 ( High res 20.000 counts )
Agilent U1272A …..….00.049 mOhms (30.000 counts)
And the Fluke 8050A 00.06 (07 fluctuates) (20.000 counts)
And the point is that all of them was measuring about 50 mOhm !!
And I got smokes from my ears , because I had take about a hundred of pictures with measurements so far,
and I had posted them in the EEV for over one year now, with both the 87V or the 28II , and all my measurements today looks wrong.
Are those Fluke meters damaged? , hell no but there is a bug in them ..
Do they measure accurately? Yes if you use the relative first so to manually zero out the resistance of the leads .
And then where is the problem ?
The problem is when you need to measure the resistance of the leads it self.
This additional 100mOhm makes the measurement to look fake.
Is there a cure ?
No there is not, the only thing that I can think of , are that in order to measure the resistance of the test leads,
I will had to use a dual banana bridge on the DMM, so to zero out ( RELative) first , and then to add the leads so to measure their own resistance.
But this sounds crazy too ..
Because even if I need to get close to the correct measurement, this bridge banana it should be made of gold !!
Before you call me as nerd because I care that much about micro ohms, just think what you are when you care that much for the micro amperes.
And now that we got even, I am ready for your comments if you have any.
Joshua:
Wow, that's kind of dissapointing. You'd figure that if it's consistent like that, they could almost fix it in software.
Richard W.:
I don't see any malfunction. Lets do some math:
We want to measure a resistance 50m?. The Fluke 87V uses a measuring-current of about 1mA.
According to ohms law this means a voltage of about 50µV at the resistors terminals.
Then consider things like:
~ thermoelectric voltage (because not every contact has the same temperature and doesnt consist of the same material, there is copper, brass, solder, ect)
~ electrochemical voltage (humidity, residue of fingerprints,... ect..)
Your Agilent U1272A has a function called Smart ? which seems to compensate some of this effects.
I could not find any data to the measuring current of the 8050A, but i guess its higher than 1mA.
This also lowers the influence of thermoelectrical and chemical voltages in the contacts.
Kiriakos-GR:
Well for the moment, what matters is to make a list of the models with this awkward behavior .
The Old Fluke 8050A looks healthy .
The 87V and the 28II is not.
I would expect from the members in our forum,
to do similar tests at the older versions of the 87, like like 87 & 87III.
Or at any Fluke meter that has 20.000 resolution at list.
And report your findings here.
Just cross the leads, and tell us the reading.
Kiriakos-GR:
--- Quote from: Richard W. on June 23, 2011, 11:24:47 am ---Your Agilent U1272A has a function called Smart ? which seems to compensate some of this effects.
--- End quote ---
Hi Richard, about the Agilent and Smart Ohm, this is another function by it self on the ohms range and needs to be manually activated.
All that I do here is to compare the ancient classic Ohms range, and nothing more.
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