Hi Andreas,
Thanks for the feedback - you raise some good points
You are in doubt wether the plastic case is equal in specs to the Metal CAN housing.
Usually it is not. With a plastic package you can measure up to 15 ppm output voltage change
for humidity changes between 40 to 70% rh. (Depending on device).
And usually the (best) ageing spec is only for hermetically sealed device.
In most datasheets this is mentioned partly as a footnote.
Even if the hermetically device is already obsolete: see LT1027, REF102.
For the AD584 the footnote is not there (because this fact is evident or does it really play no role?)
Yes, I'm certainly aware that humidity can play a part with plastic cases. And because I live in an old house (where the workshop is in the cellar), I've had to learn a lot about the subject - and invest in a dehumidifier
However, unless I've missed it, the datasheet doesn't differentiate between "H" and "N" in any parameter - as a result, I thought it was safest to not to speculate about it here.
The AD584 has a relative large input voltage dependency. (20-50 ppm/V)
So if you use a battery (non stabilized) you should not only record the temperature but also the supply voltage.
I did quote it (15.00V).
I agree that the line regulation is specified at 20-50ppm worst-case, but I found it was somewhat better than that. Admittedly, I didn't test it exhaustively, and in fact I think I only checked the 2nd unit, but I will double-check this aspect soon.
In the meantime, here's what I recorded here:
http://www.markhennessy.co.uk/ad584_references/#unit2_summaryA 5.5V drop in supply voltage (18 to 12.5V) caused a 200uV change in the 10V output voltage, which is 20ppm overall, or 3.6ppm/V. Surprisingly good.
The microprocessor could be a Holtek HT68F002 (best guess).
There are not many processors with supply on pin 1 + 8.
(and since pin 4 is a output the pic12F508/627/683 devices do not fit)
Thanks - that's useful insight
BTW, I'm playing around with an AD588 at the moment
All the best,
Mark