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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.design,sci.electronics.repair,sci.electronics.equipment
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Good comments Ed.
I want to thank everyone else who has offered *positive* comments also. Like I said, I think this is a need for anyone who has equipment at home. TMT On Mar 2, 11:22 pm, ehsjr wrote: Too_Many_Tools wrote: I have a well stocked test bench at home containing a range of analog, digital and RF test equipment as I am sure most of you also do. Well the question I have is how do you handle the calibration of your equipment? What do you use for calibration standards for resistance, voltage, current and frequency? Links to recommended circuits, pictures and sources would be appreciated. Since this is a need for anyone who has test equipment, I hope to see a good discussion on this subject. Thanks TMT The real question is how much precision do you really need in the home "lab"? How often have you needed to use your DMM with how many *accurate* significant digits? 100 minus some *very* small percent of the time, 2 significant digits is all you need. Do you _really_ care if your 5.055 volt reading is really 5.06 or 5.04? Oh hell yes, I want to puff out my chest like everyone else and think I have *accurate* equipment. But I'm curious as to what home circuits need meters that can read voltage accurately to 3 decimal places? 2 decimal places? The question for current measurement: in what home brew circuit design/troubleshooting do you need accuracy below the tens of mA digit ? *Need*, not *want*. Do you even trust your DMM on an amps setting for those measurements, or do you measure the current indirectly? How about ohms? Would you trust any DMM, regardless of who calibrated it, to measure down in the miliohm numbers? To me, the design of the circuit being mesured has to take care of all of that crap. If it is so poorly designed that a 10 mV departure from nominal (that is missed by my innaccurate meter) will keep it from working, that suggests other problems. Yes, the home "lab" person wants extreme accuracy to as many decimal places as he can get. But when does he ever really need it? None of this is to argue against having the best instrumentation you can afford, or references to check it against, or paying for calibration and so forth. But for myself, I need a dose of reality from time to time when I start drooling over some accuracy specs that I will never need at home. My bet is that most of us are seduced by that same muse. Ed- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - |
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