Hi group,
This 'tail' that is being observed is part of the RMS conversion process. The
M is for mean (or average). The signal has to be averaged over time, this implies a low pass response.
The tail isn't unique to the current ranges. I took a Fluke 85 III and attached a wire to pin 6 of the AD737 RMS converter.
I put the meter in AC volts and fixed the range at 4V
I applied a burst 1000 cycles of 1kHz sinewave to the input.
Here are the waveforms:
The cyan trace is the input
The blue trace is the output on pin 6 of the AD737
The time base is 400ms/div.
If I look at the Analog devices datasheet:
I find graphs like this one. It basically says the accuracy improves if you do more averaging.
More averaging is a slower transient response.
There are similar graphs on the AD8436 datasheet:
They even have this one, this is similar to the measurement I made:
[ Specified attachment is not available ]
A long 'tail' might be a good thing ...
Regards,
Jay_Diddy_B