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Electronics Repair (sci.electronics.repair) Discussion of repairing electronic equipment. Topics include requests for assistance, where to obtain servicing information and parts, techniques for diagnosis and repair, and annecdotes about success, failures and problems. |
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Posted to sci.electronics.repair,sci.electronics.components,sci.electronics.design
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![]() Arcane question, and sort of long, but here goes.... Last night, young son was in the process of adding foglights to his car and asked me for some wire to extend the harness. I wasn't sure what the current draw would be so I grabbed one of the foglight assemblies and connected it to the Eico 1050 battery charger/DC power supply which has been part of my garage tool clutter for nearly 50 years: http://home.comcast.net/~jwisnia18/temp/eico1050.jpg When I cranked the voltage up to 13, the bulb lit brightly and the ammeter on the Eico read around 9 amps. That seemed sort of high to me so I asked the kid, "How big a fuse is in the harness which came with those lights?" he looked at it and told me it was a 15 amp fuse. 15 amps for TWO 9 amp bulbs? Obviously something was't right, so I got my Simpson 260 and saw that the current drawn by that bulb was really a bit less than 5 amps. Since SWMBO was out getting some "retail therapy" I had some free time, and taking the Eico into my workshop, I opened it up, disconnected the leads to the ammeter and fed it with my bench supply. That verified again that it was reading almost twice the DC current passing through it. By a couple of "cut and trys" I found that about 4 inches of 18 gage solid copper wire shunting the meter made it read correctly enough for "gummint work", so I soldered that wire in and closed the Eico back up. I believe the ammmeter is what I used to know as a "moving iron" type, and IIRC the restoring force was supplied by some kind of permanant magnet field, not by a mechanical spring. Am I right about that? I doubt that Eico installed a defective meter when they built the unit around 1965 (The date marked on the meter.) and I'm guessing that the meter's restoring magnet weakened over 50 years, increasing its sensitivity to nearly double. Anyone have any similar experience with those kind of meters, I'd enjoy learning more, just for the ****s and grins of it. Thanks guys, Jeff -- Jeffry Wisnia (W1BSV + Brass Rat '57 EE) "Rudeness is the weak man's imitation of strength." |
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