Wow, so if I get your statement right, Zlymex is more to trust than a company that sells precision resistance standards. That is tough.
Of course I would - by far! I'm sorry I probably didn't make that clear so I'll repeat it: "of course I would - BY FAR!!!!!!!" Especially over "a company that sells...".
Hmm, perhaps I should set up a company and start selling precision resistance standards in the near future - so you should start trusting
me my company rather than established experts in the field who aren't companies?
Trust has to be earned and Lymex has done that in spades posting a great deal of high quality information, test results, teardowns of metrology gear (including Wekomm's standard resistor!) etc. both here and on bbs.38hot.net.
Wekomm on the other hand haven't - at least with respect to standard resistors. They have been selling their resistance standard for five years now and yet the only information I can find as to the stability performance was a paper published in 2015, pushing the virtues of using Vishay's VHA518-7 and used in Vishay's marketing and the paper you linked which documents tests on a Vishay VHP101. Both of which are now completely irrelevant as, according to your new information, Wekomm are now using a different resistive element - a Vishay BMF element mounted by Wekomm.
Just to be absolutely clear, I've no doubt that Wekomm are a high quality engineering company and, better still, likely an engineering led company unlike the finance driven companies such as Fluke (Danaher Corporation) and Vishay. I'm quite sure that Keysight would not have employed them to work on the 3458A update if they weren't excellent engineers. I wish them all the best.
But their marketing sucks
*big time*. Assuming anyone knows they make a resistance standard and visits their website, would be seriously dissapointed. The website is barely functional and pretty much says "we don't have the time or resources to provide you with any information about our 'high quality and very expensive product' so go and visit our German only (as far as I can tell) distributor's website where you can download a German only version of the datasheet".
(It would be rude to include as many facepalms I believe this really deserves!).
And then the datasheet content.
It has changed from the 2015 version. I've no doubt there is a proper English version of the datasheet but I can't find it so here is part of the Google translated version from the
www.datatec.de website:
Where to start?
1) No tolerance specified. It may be calibrated to .1ppm but I wouldn't be very happy to buy a 10K standard resistor that is 1% off nominal. I'm sure they are at least .01% or better so why not
2) WTF is going off with those maximium voltages and currents? 1mA through a 100Mohm resistor is going to be a just a little bit more than the 500V maximum specified. Same for many others. I'm quite certain that Wekomm understand ohm's law so why, oh why couldn't they bother to get someone to proof read the datasheet? Is the 100ohm resistor really good for 250mW operation unlike all the other values?
3) "Repetition error (hysteresis)
"Repetition error (hysteresis): 30 ° C to 20 ° C to 30 ° C: negligible error."
That's good but the storage temperature spec is 0 to 40C. So what is the hysteresis error after I've stored my 'standard' at 0C and/or 40C?
And now that you showed us how easy it is to build a resistance standard,
I didn't show any such thing as you know perfectly well. I'm not here to attack Wekomm - this thread was genuinely a request to find out if there was any more long term stability information available wrt. the RS9010. It turns out there isn't, especially because they have substantially changed the construction of the resistance standard over time.
would you mind to build them for us and sell us calibrated and predictable resistance standard for a fraction of the price Wekomm is asking for?
Predicatable? Wekomm haven't, as far as I can find, published anything about the drift characteristics of their (current) RS9010A standard. As their spokesperson perhaps you can elucidate?
I'm sure they are a great company, but since you chose to have a go at me rather than address any of the points I raised I have to assume you have decided to place more importance to defending your colleagues/contacts at Wekomm than taking an objective viewpoint.
Let's say 500€? That would be great. Is one year from now on okay for you to do it? Can you might send first samples by the middle of this year? Perfect.
500€? Why not just buy a VHP101 for considerably less? Vishay's datasheet specs are 2ppm/6 years typical drift compared to the Wekomm's .5ppm/year. Who are you going to believe?
Vishay's temperature coefficient specs attract a lot of
derision suspicion but some posters here, including Lymex, have confirmed the drift claims. As far as I can see Wekomm haven't demonstrated that their product is any better than a VHP101.
Okay, no more joking. What I saw and what I was told, the first resistance standards used Vishay VHA518 tube resistors. This times are gone and they now use resistor elements that are fabricated by Vishay, but are based on a design by Wekomm, using their own metal foil and are no longer packaged by Vishay, but a bare resistor element that Wekomm assembles on their own.
OK, so they have cost reduced their first effort?
I think you'd agree, that if if you have a company with employees to pay and if that improvement you made helped you to make a more longterm stable but also predictable resistor, you would not make all this information public to help your competitors to copy you, right?
As far as I am concerned they haven't demonstrated anything. Improvements or otherwise. Could you link to *anything* relating to their current product? As to making the information public, it's called marketing; don't you think potential customers might want to know how the product performs?
But if you still believe you can do it any better for the fraction of the costs, I'm the last one stopping you from doing so and presenting your results and insides right here for free.
-branadic-
I'm not the one trying to sell some ridiculously overpriced resistor. The onus is on Wekomm to explain why their resistor justifies the price. Unfortunately, because (according to you) they have changed the design they presumably can't show any long term drift data.
And why are't they explaining the change in design themselves rather than using you as their mouthpiece?
[EDIT] Added missing datasheet