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Why some brands don't do LCR meters?

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pope:
Thank you gents.

We're talking about a range from 10-20mH to 10H maximum and accuracy of less than 5% is more than enough so, perhaps wiring Vs accuracy is not an issue in such scenario(?)

tszaboo:

--- Quote from: pope on November 30, 2023, 09:31:19 pm ---Thank you gents.

We're talking about a range from 10-20mH to 10H maximum and accuracy of less than 5% is more than enough so, perhaps wiring Vs accuracy is not an issue in such scenario(?)

--- End quote ---
I'm confused. Are you making random inductors and need to verify their specifications? Or are you making the same inductor over and over again, and you need to verify?
Because if the latter, then count the turns ratio?

pope:

--- Quote from: tszaboo on November 30, 2023, 09:43:14 pm ---
--- Quote from: pope on November 30, 2023, 09:31:19 pm ---Thank you gents.

We're talking about a range from 10-20mH to 10H maximum and accuracy of less than 5% is more than enough so, perhaps wiring Vs accuracy is not an issue in such scenario(?)

--- End quote ---
I'm confused. Are you making random inductors and need to verify their specifications? Or are you making the same inductor over and over again, and you need to verify?
Because if the latter, then count the turns ratio?

--- End quote ---

I make multi-tap inductors with the same values and I want to match them in pairs. The closest they're matched the better. 

So, for example each inductor has 11 taps ranging from 10mH all the way up to 10H. 

Does it make sense?

BeBuLamar:
I don't know why either for example Fluke doesn't sell LCR meter but the Amprobe division does.

TimFox:
Fluke did make an LCR meter back in 1996:  The PM6306.
https://dam-assets.fluke.com/s3fs-public/PM6306__umeng0200.pdf

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