Hi,
To build on what Dr. Frank said.
I scanned the 121GW manual to see what it had to say about crest factor.
The manual echoes the Analog Devices specifications for the AD8436 as having CF of 10.
I am not sure if the crest factor is preserved in the design, because it would require a lot of headroom, without clipping, in the amplifier stage in front of the AD8436.
Crest factor is the peak / RMS
The Fluke 289 DMM has a crest factor of 3 at full scale and increases to 5 at mid-scale. This make sense because there is more headroom at mid-scale.
You can find tables on the internet that illustrate various crest factors.
A 5% duty-cycle square wave has a crest factor approximately equal to 4.5
A 1% duty-cycle square wave has a crest factor of 10
Most waveforms that you measure will be lower.
Regards,
Jay_Diddy_B
It's getting even more complicated, as inside the 121GW in ACI mode, the RMS converter is AC coupled only.
I experimented a bit with asymmetric current pulses, i.e. positive square wave pulses only, generated by a variable duty cycle pulse generator and a V/I converter, applied to the 121GW, BM869, KS34465A and a HP3458A in series, and often got about 4 different results, due to different coupling and RMS conversion methods. Of course the over range/clipping indication was also different.
That all was quite confusing, i.e. what would really be the meaning of the displayed RMS measurements, even on these other instruments which have proper (over-) ranging functionality. Let aside the 121GW, on all other DMMs it's always very difficult to find out from specification or the manual, how the AC signal is coupled internally and how the RMS conversion is really accomplished.
Frank