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Fluke A3001FC strange battery drain problem.
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BeBuLamar:
The Fluke representative gave me this simple AC current clamp meter with Fluke Connect. It works OK but I found it drains the 2 AA batteries when not in use. So today I checked the current draw and found initially when I just connect the power it only draws 0.3 µA so it's no problem there. Turning it on it draws from 7 to 15 mA. OK that's fine. Turning it off with its power button the unit went off but now it draw 300µA which is significant. And it continued to draw the 300µA until I disconnect the power source and reconnect it then it draw 0.3µA again.
So basically I would have to remove the battery and reinstall the battery whenever I am done using it.
Anyone has any idea what is the problem?
bdunham7:
Is it capable of being turned back on via the remote app? How long does it take to drain the batteries? If they are AA, I'd expect that to take a few thousand hours?
BeBuLamar:
I don't use it much and noticed that the battery drained after a few weeks. No it can't be turned on via the remote app. I know what you meant if it drain 0.3 mA it would take a year to drain them.
floobydust:
I had a device behave like this and it was a firmware bug. The MCU and peripherals did not properly go to sleep- under certain shutdown sequences.
You might try a few things and see what makes it shutdown properly, if that is possible or if Bluetooth activity is part of it staying at a higher drain etc. Or it might draw higher current just for a few minutes after shutdown.
Sometimes a programmer is a bit sloppy with the 'go to sleep' path and forgets to turn something off.
In my case, the manufacturer issued a recall because it caused batteries to go dead and then leak. I had to laugh, the replacement product changed over to a hard on/off switch :palm: instead of fixing the firmware bug.
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