Motivated mostly by wanting to clean up a bit, I retrieved a couple of old Fluke 8800A DMMs from my shelves and decided to fix or scrap them. The result from the first one (they have the same symptoms) is a bad LM311N comparator in the dual-slope integration circuit. I can eventually get the LM311N, or if I want to spend big bux, the LM111J-8, but there seems to be an issue with the circuit design.
They use +/-18V supplies with the open emitter tied to Vcc, the negative input set to near 0V and the positive input fed a ~+10V signal at the zero crossing point by an op-amp. The collector output is pulled "up" to -13V, since the 5V logic on these is run from -18 to -13V, which is a common setup to allow the logic to operate N-J-Fets as analog switches.
Anyway, my poor LM311N is running at the 'absolute max' supply voltage of 36 volts total and the positive input is going to 28 volts above Vcc. These meters are old and have lasted this long, so if my only option is to just put LM311Ns back in, that's what I'll do. Does anyone know of a reasonable substitute for this, something perhaps with a 40V supply limit? The open emitter is not needed since the circuit just ties it to -18V anyway. The open collector needs to sink about 2.2mA. And the 200ns response time is probably needed since the meter is doing 20,000 counts with a 100ms integration period.