So I'm curious how good it actually is (I would expect it to be rather slow in response). And what about stability with capacitive load...
I think the point I was trying to make is that for the price I don't expect supper duper performance BUT I do worry about the failure rate.
Also I do find the feature set very use full.
I was thinking of writing this up as a more formal question but I will note it hear first.
NewFile1 shows the start up (pressing the channel button not the main switch) with no load, I have tryed it with a tiny bit of load and it was similar, (the transience of my circuit is similar so its annoying.)
NewFile2 shows flicking a in line switch. (I have plots of some nasty bouncing but they are over well before the few milliseconds transience of what I was interested in)
Sooo, is this pretty standard for a power supply? Is this standard for this power supply (is mine broken) ?
I had a bit of a look when I got it and really struggled to get anything nearly this good anywhere else, even some poor one channel thing was well over a third of the price but maybe I didn't look hard enough. So to be honest just using a switch every now and again is really not a issue for me when I get so much more than I would other wise. That said would like to take Daves advice and build one my self, but it still will not come close to the DP832.
Is there a better strategy than a switch? I was thinking about using a Micro controller and a transistor or something as that wouldn't bounce but if it did anything funky I wouldn't have the experience to tell so I think I will stick with my switch and a cap.
*** I also tested the supply with the probes on the terminals and got the same answer.