I've been thinking about the feasibility of keeping the internal temperature of my 34401 constant .
As the first step I've isolated the internal frame from the outer aluminum case by a 3mm thick isolating material (an isolating sleeve put on the internal frame in the entire length) to avoid fast changes of the internal temperature (internal air flow).
My idea comes from the fact(s) that
a) the display filament (wired permanently on) takes 2-3 Watts off the transformer (6V AC, 10ohm when cold and maybe 20ohm resistance when hot),
b) the transformer gets pretty hot,
c) the total power consumption of the meter is "25 VA peak (10 W average)",
therefore I "do assume" I can keep the internal temperature at the constant level, say, ~35 degC by using the transformer and a load wired to the 6V AC (not the filament itself) as "the heater".
I've been usually using the display switched OFF while doing longer measurements so those 2-3 Watts could be redirected for the temperature regulation at that time.
Now, this is an idea, and while the technical solution with a temperature control seem to be rather feasible, I am not sure the 2-3Watts taken off the filament is enough for the stabilization.
Any experience with such an exercise?
Hello:
In my laboratory I have 4 multimeters of 6 ½ digits 1x HP3456A, 2x Fluke 8505A and 2x Agilent 34401A. The last to be acquired were 34401a, had symptoms of instability (without taking into account their calibration), the trafo heated a lot of one of them, in the other it remained a few degrees above room temperature, between 8 ~ 10. I really surprised me.
The excess of temperature was because the previous owner changed the capacitors of the source without realizing that they had to be low esr, when changing the temperature of the trafo under a lot, it remains like the other unit.
The voltage reference has its own oven, it can be improved by putting a sponge (preferable black) surrounding it but that will not improve the accuracy or stability, only that it will stabilize faster and the possible air currents will be harder to act About it when the multimeter is without the lid.
The complete thermal stability of the whole set implies that both the resistors and U101, U102 and precision components are at the temperature of the interior of the multimeter, if it heated to heatter more and more. If you look at the xformer, it is far from the tension reference for this reason, but with an ambient temperature of 22° the xformer of which I have in the laboratory is about 30º more or less, until the resistances of the dividers do not Have that temperature the multimeter will not measure correctly.
If you do not have a stable reference voltage to test it, or even having it you want to see how the temperature acts on the divisor resistors connects a 4-wire short circuit and put the multimeter to measure ohm to 4 threads and have the null and leave it so until Stabilize, you will see the effect of the micro-ohms (more on the right) as as time passes the value of the measure, of course this with the multimeter with the cover set.
Sorry for my English
Greetings.