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[email protected] greenpjs@neo.rr.com is offline
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Default mechanical zero on a small meter

On Tue, 27 Apr 2010 07:04:53 -0700 (PDT), Andrew VK3BFA
wrote:

On Mar 17, 11:57*am, "Dave M" wrote:
Jeff Liebermann wrote:
On Thu, 25 Feb 2010 07:32:28 -0800 (PST), klem kedidelhopper
wrote:


After setting zero I moved my finger over the meter face first thing
in the morning and the needle moved up scale about 10 percent. I let
it sit on the bench for about 24 hours without touching it. When I
looked at it again it was back to zero. So the trick is to set it,
leave it for a day let it discharge, and then tweak it again. Clumsy
procedure but it works. Glad this is my own equipment and not a
customer repair job....Lenny


Nice workaround. *So it is static. *Is this NORMAL for a small panel
meter? *We don't have much of a static problem on the left coast, so I
don't see much of that. *I waved my hand around various small panel
meters around the shop. *No deflection.


The easiest and best solution is to eliminate the static charge by rubbing
the meter face with a clothes dryer anti-cling sheet. Alternatively, buy a
bottle of anti-cling spray and give the meter a ligh misting.
That will dissipate the static charge and you can handle the meter as you
wish without upsetting the zero setting.

--
David
dgminala at mediacombb dot net


This all sounds terribly bizarre - Its a moving coil meter, it might
go "whack" on getting a static charge, but a steady reading?

It is NOT current flow from a static discharge that creates the
reading. It is a static (as in unchanging) charge on the case
attracting or repelling some other part of the movement.



- must be
an INCREDIBLY sensitive meter movement- femtoamps? - have a look at
the output of the op amp, preferably with an analogue meter - (as
suggested) (no signal, 0 output) and the bias resistors around it.
Especially the high value (100k ones) (any Tantalum capacitors,
replace them)
(sorry Dave - a view from the trenches)

Andrew VK3BFA.

PS - its axiomatic that the thing causing the fault is in the least
accessible section of the cct. A variation of Murphys Law.