Hello, my first topic, post and all that jazz, and stright away a question.
I have bought new uni-t 139c true rms multimeter for the true rms feature, i wanted to measure non-sinusoidal AC voltage of around 5-8V rms at 50Hz. It is a crt tv tube heater voltage driven by synchronization returning lines, and it should be set to 6,3V rms acording to service manual with a true rms multimeter, or rather "effective value voltmeter of non-sinusoidal waveforms"as the service manual calls it.
Normal non rms meter measure about 5-5,5V AC, but that is totaly unaccurate. I have 2 nan rms meters and they read about 0,7V apart, But service manual says, that with non rms meter i should calculate it by 1,15 to get +-5% accuracy, whitch is about +-0,3V
My new ut139c reads either 0,006V at 15,6KHz 50% duty cucle or somwhere between 3 and 10V at 50Hz 49, 37 or 27 % duty cycle at random, but it stick to one value at the time. I turn it off, and back on and it is the same story again, either 0.006V or something random, so i have absolutly no faith in its readings.
What is even more strange i can read a value of this voltage only when i use uni-t probes, when i solder test leads directly to the test points i get 0,006V every time.
Normal AC voltages from a transformer or mains voltage is displayed normaly but i had also a little bit of a wierd experience when i was trying to measure secundaty voltage on a small transformer.
it was fine on auto range, but it was 0.006 on manualy set range, and transformer was outputing about 8V 500mA
So the question is, did i get a foulty meter, and if this is the case how to support my claim for the guarantee. Or is this meter that badly shielded or calibrated, so it picks up interference trash and nothing can be done.
What do you think?
edit ..................
i don't know how should i describe better my measured voltage, so i did the first best thing i could do, I took a photo of my oscilloscope screen while probing this voltage. It shuld be about 22Vpp with about 25-30% duty cycle sawtooth, frequency however might be correct, because it is bacically 60us like on the screen. (that would also calculate corectly for 625 lines at 25 frames per secund of pal color system)
But why isn't my meter doing my math for me?
edit2***********
ok i think i know the reason.
As i mentioned before i was sure, that my tv crt heater was powered by returning lines, but i mistook lines with frames so i was convinced it should be 50Hz from vertical deflection, and it wasent , because it is driven by horizontal deflection at 16500hz.
The meter rms bandwidth ends at 1000hz, so i have 16 x higher signal bandwidth . The meter flaw is debunked and results from all my meters are flawed as well.
The question is now, Why uni-t did not make "out of range" notification , based on measured frequency? It would be a nice feature an a meter with limited range of rms measurments.
The secund question is, would an analog meter work any better?