Hi guys,
I was wondering which physical measurements are required to fully check a multimeter. Not for testing if they're in spec, but to see if every function is generally working or not.
We had an incident at work this week where we tried figuring out the insulation test procedure of an older Gossen electrical safety tester unit, and it turns out the multimeter used is dead on AC volts. We do not have any reference gear at work and I only own a AD584 quad DC "reference" (not that bad, actually) personally, so currently the only ACV testing option is sticking the probes into a wall socket (that also yields a 50Hz signal...yay)
From my understanding, having a working DC volts readout is essential for basically all measurements. However, there's little "X is working -> Y will be working, too" derivation beyond that.
DCV: Well, needs DCV, d'oh. Are, let's say, µV and kV ranges fundamentally different?
R: DCV + current source
Continuity: DCV + current source + buzzer (or other alerting circuitry)
Diode test: DCV + current source
T (thermocouples): DCV + LUT
T (resistive): DCV + current source + LUT
f: some sort of timing circuit
C: DCV + current source + timing
L: DCV + current source + timing
Not exactly sure if ACV is handled the same between TRMS and averaging meters, same for ACA. Both ACA and DCA will require knowledge about the meter since there might be two or more shunts (and fuses) that all need to be tested. All advanced features like e.g. 4-20mA readouts or Low-Z voltage measurements will require the base function plus some woo-woo on top.
Judging from that list, I'd already say measuring each of these things from one or more physical representations would be easier than somehow deriving it by plugging into cunning circuitry. When researching this on the forum and the rest of the interwebs, I already came across units like the DMMcheck (plus), but these are often positioned to be references instead of simple testers, so they're limited to doing a subset of these measurements in a precise way. Is there any commercial or non-commercial unit out there that just provides a couple of resistors, capacitors, inductors, a diode and a DC+AC voltage and current source? Shouldn't be that difficult if sub-1% precision isn't a requirement, one just needs to find a suitably large switch to change between all these options?