Ok so I have a DMM Check from voltagestandard.com. I would like to calibrate my DMM's AC though. I had an idea and im wondering if its viable or if im going to lose accuracy the accuracy of the standard?
I was thinking about connecting it output to an mega ohm resistor divider, this would be to shave it down to 4v from 5v, then to an opamp(LM-385) in unity gain to buffer the signal then running it through a TI TLE-2426 (
http://www.ti.com/lit/ds/symlink/tle2426.pdf) which is a precision rail divider. At this point I would then have a +2,-2 output which I could pulse with a 555.
My v standard 5.0000 volts exactly, and my DMM is a 40,000 count .05% +5 accuracy/resolution meter. Im not worried about the frequency out of the 555 so much but I need it to +2.0000/-2.000 pulsed waves. So will this circuit ruin the standards accuracy or what? Im afraid of noise and/or loading the standard is going to mess things up.
If this isnt a great idea maybe someone else out there has a better way? Or even if it would work its be nice if there was a way to do this with less chips. I know his DMM check plus does 100hz pulsed AC at -/+2.5v. But to keep my meter in its range I need 4v peek to peek so 2.5 is no good. His business is also to make money so his projects are not open source and he even scratches the labels off certain chips. This is no issue but it basically means I have no idea how he implements AC.