Home |
Search |
Today's Posts |
#11
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]()
On Sat, 6 Aug 2005 13:00:57 -0500, "DBLEXPOSURE"
wrote: "John Fields" wrote in message .. . Did you actually try it? Yes, just now, and your correct, (as usual), I had to add another divider to give me 12V to run into the B chnl. Then display (A-B). I didn't say the scope's response wasn't linear, I was talking about the change in the output voltage from the divider as a function of the change in resistance of the DUT. Wouldn't you consider an output change of 5mV for every 1 ohm change in the DUT to be linear? --- Yes, but that's not what's happening. For your 30 volt circuit: 30V | [1000R] | +-----E | [R] | 0V This is what is: R E DELTA E ------+----------+-------- 1355 17.26115 ------- 1356 17.26655 0.00540 1357 17.27196 0.00541 1358 17.27735 0.00539 1359 17.28275 0.00540 1360 17.28814 0.00539 1361 17.29352 0.00538 1362 17.29890 0.00538 1363 17.30427 0.00537 1364 17.30964 0.00537 1365 17.31501 0.00537 1366 17.32037 0.00536 1367 17.32573 0.00536 1368 17.33108 0.00535 1369 17.33643 0.00535 1370 17.34177 0.00534 1371 17.34711 0.00534 1372 17.35245 0.00534 1373 17.35777 0.00532 1374 17.36310 0.00533 1375 17.36842 0.00532 So, we see that for equal increments of resistance we _don't_ get equal increments of voltage, therefore the relationship between resistance and voltage isn't linear To me, a nonlinear response would be something like, 5mV for the first ohm of change, 7mV for the next ohm, 10 for the third, etc, etc... Yup! -- John Fields Professional Circuit Designer |
Thread Tools | Search this Thread |
Display Modes | |
|
|
![]() |
||||
Thread | Forum | |||
Amps and Ohms and Volts? | Electronics Repair | |||
ohms... | Electronics | |||
Tariff 19? Economy 7 meter change | UK diy | |||
Turn Your Power Supply into an Ohmmeter - It's Free! | Electronics Repair | |||
Low ohms, (Dick Smith ESR meter), measurement problems | Electronics Repair |