Hello there,
I'm definitely at a beginner level with my electronics (I studied it for around 3 years, but with a decade passing without using this knowledge I've pretty much forgotten all but the very basics). I did electronics though as a hobby 20 years ago with a friend and we ended up with all bits of odds and ends (being 10 or so at the time, nothing is junk
).
My problem is this LCR meter that I just received a day ago (From tequipment.net; I imported it into NZ) is not giving me the expected readings for capacitors vs my Fluke 287 and I can't really figure out quite what I'm doing wrong.
I callibrated it using a copper wire short (open and closed) for each of the ranges, and relative all the results (using the included alligator clips) first before connecting the capacitors...and the results seem good at first, but the results seem to go downhill as I turn up the frequency. The results of some unused capacitors (only purchased several months ago) are below. The Fluke 287 (despite it's bulk) is my favourite DMM for it's accuracy with a straight up 1% + 5 digits for capacitors until you exceed 20,000uF; the callibration certificate included suggested it was dead on with the capacitor measurement (though they only used a 5nF to gauge the accuracy).
BK precision 879B readings vs Fluke 287 & BK Precision 2709B:
MKT capactors
(1nF marked)
100Hz (2.5% + 2 digits) 1.0422nF (parallel) vs Fluke 287 @ 1.04nF and BK2709B @ 1.045nF
120Hz (2.5% + 2 digits) 1.0419nF (parallel)
1kHz (0.7% + 2 digits) 1.0370nF (parallel)
10kHz (0.5% + 2 digits) 1.0260nF (parallel)
If you compare the 100Hz range capacitance with the 10kHz range capacitance it is a difference of just over 1.5% (1.0260nF/1.0422nF = 0.984) which is within spec for the given value. If the fluke is within spec the value given for capacitance is between 0.98nF & 1.10nF so this looks ok. On a side note the 2709B seems almost identical to the value of the fluke despite having a 3.0% + 30 digit accuracy at this range.
(1.5nF marked)
100Hz (2.5% + 2 digits) 1.5541nF (parallel) vs Fluke 287 @ 1.56nF and BK2709B @ 1.561nF
120Hz (2.5% + 2 digits) 1.5533nF (parallel)
1kHz (0.7% + 2 digits) 1.5451nF (parallel)
10kHz (0.5% + 2 digits) 1.5292nF (parallel)
Within spec, though despite the greater accuracy of 10kHz & 1kHz there is a big change between them, note that the values are decreasing, this seems to happen a lot in these results.
(3.9nF marked)
100Hz (2.5% + 2 digits) 4.183nF (parallel) vs Fluke 287 @ 4.19nF and BK2709B @ 4.22nF
120Hz (2.5% + 2 digits) 4.182nF (parallel)
1kHz (0.7% + 2 digits) 4.165nF (parallel)
10kHz (0.5% + 2 digits) 4.121nF (parallel)
Same as above...the results of 100Hz to 10kHz varies by 1.5% with the biggest jump happening from 1kHz to 10kHz
(56nF marked)
100Hz (0.5% + 2 digits) 55.67nF (parallel) vs Fluke 287 @ 55.8nF and BK2709B @ 56.01nF
120Hz (0.5% + 2 digits) 55.66nF (parallel)
1kHz (0.5% + 2 digits) 55.40nF (parallel)
10kHz (0.5% + 2 digits) 54.82nF (series)
Strange, still exactly 1.5% difference between the 100Hz and 10kHz range; yet according to the accuracy charts in the manual the should be within 0.5% of the value...so something is wrong here (probably someone more knowledgeable about LCR meters might know why)
(82nF marked)
100Hz (0.5% + 2 digits) 79.80nF (parallel) vs Fluke 287 @ 79.9nF and BK2709B @ 79.7nF
120Hz (0.5% + 2 digits) 79.78nF (parallel)
1kHz (0.5% + 2 digits) 79.37nF (parallel)
10kHz (0.5% + 2 digits) 78.15nF (series)
The change in value is now past 2% between 100Hz and 10kHz; even assuming that the 0.5% is on either side of the real value, that wouldn't exceed much more then 1% (even after adding the extra digits)
(470nF marked)
100Hz (0.5% + 1 digits) 486.1nF (series) vs Fluke 287 @ 487nF and BK2709B @ 488.8nF
120Hz (0.5% + 1 digits) 486.1nF (series)
1kHz (0.5% + 1 digits) 484.8nF (series)
10kHz (0.7% + 2 digits) 479.5nF (series)
Just over 1.3% difference...probably pretty close to spec, but most of that drop is between 1kHz and 10kHz
Electrolytic capacitors
(2.2uF marked)
100Hz (0.5% + 1 digits) 2.1951uF (series) vs Fluke 287 @ 2.27uF and BK2709B @ 2.264uF
120Hz (0.5% + 1 digits) 2.1849uF (series)
1kHz (0.5% + 1 digits) 1.9745uF (series) observed dropping very slowly. After about 1 minutes was 1.9704uF
10kHz (0.7% + 2 digits) 1.7418uF (series)
Up to 20% off (what a sale!!!) and if the fluke is within 1% + 5 digit spec, the 2.1951uF exceeds this value...so it is starting to look wrong
(10uF marked)
100Hz (0.5% + 1 digits) 10.306uF (series) vs Fluke 287 @ 10.56uF and BK2709B @ 10.54uF
120Hz (0.5% + 1 digits) 10.275uF (series)
1kHz (0.7% + 2 digits) 9.508uF (series)
10kHz (3.7% + 3 digits) 8.648uF (series)
Over 16% variation doesn't cover the accuracy discrepancies of this range. Fluke / BK 2709B measurements are quite different from the LCR meter now; Looks like the BK has a pretty decent capacitor meter when compared against the Fluke 287...they coincide very closely.
(47uF marked)
100Hz (0.7% + 2 digits) 46.29uF (series) vs Fluke 287 @ 47.5uF and BK2709B @ 47.67uF
120Hz (0.7% + 2 digits) 46.15uF (series)
1kHz (2% + 2 digits) 44.46uF (series)
10kHz (3.9% + 5 digits) 44.74uF (series)
Quite an improvement now, just 3.3% variation between 100Hz & 10kHz, the DMM meters measured readings are still quite different though from the LCR.
(330uF marked)
100Hz (0.7% + 2 digits) 303.68uF (series) vs Fluke 287 @ 332uF and BK2709B @ 328.2uF
120Hz (0.7% + 2 digits) 302.25uF (series)
1kHz (2% + 2 digits) 285.65uF (series) Slighly fluctuates
10kHz not rated but a fluctuating value from 314uF-318uF
Around 6% difference between 100Hz and 1kHz (10kHz not listed in manual), the Fluke & BK 2709B agree to disagree with BK 879B.
(470uF marked)
100Hz (2% + 2 digits) 453.6uF (series) vs Fluke 287 @ 481uf and BK2709B @ 476.8uF
120Hz (2% + 2 digits) 453.8uF (series)
1kHz (3.7% + 3 digits) 443.5uF (series)
10kHz Not supported but reads at around 680-690uF fluctuating
Assuming the LCR meter is right, it is within spec across the range. But it is quite different from the values on the digital multimeters.
I've tried checking out the waveform outputs on all the meters (when in capacitance range); it was pretty hard to gauge what was happening with the BK 2709B & Fluke 287, where as the 879B puts out a seemingly perfect sinewave at whatever frequency is selected (thanks for the recommendation on the Rigol 1052E oscilloscope Dave!, never could dream of buying something like that for such a price 10 years ago).
I guess the short question after all of this info is whether I return this meter (...blasted shipping will be expensive though), or whether I learn how to use the meter properly to measure values of capacitance via the advice of some knowledgeable guru on this forum!