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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BillJ
 
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Default Turn Your Power Supply into an Ohmmeter - It's Free!

During a canal boat holiday, my brother enquired what current the
starter took from the battery.

I found that my cheap pocket DMM would read the millivolts across the
earth strap when we turned on all the lights of known wattage; and it
would also read the volts across the strap whilst the starter was
turning. So we were able to calculate the starter motor current as
around 200 A whilst turning steadily (but not the peaks).

I forget how we strangled the engine (diesel) to stop it starting
during this experiment. Could we have let air in somehow? Maybe there
was a stop valve?

BillJ
(Edinburgh)

On Wed, 16 Jul 2003 01:34:28 -0700, Watson A.Name - 'Watt Sun'
wrote:

I got tired of switching the leads of my DMM. Suddenly if dawned on
me that I can just set the power supply to 10.0V for exaample, and
read the current, and then divide the voltage by the current to find
the resistance. Like I put a resistance on the PS, it reads 10.0V and
the current is .018A, so 10 / .018 gives 555.6 ohms. Must be a 560
ohm resistor.

I turned my PS into an ohmmeter - FREE!

Hee-hee - Work smarter, not harder!

Of course, make sure the current stays low so the resistance doesn't
overheat. For low resistances use a volt or less.




 
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