Hi,
I have acquired a Fluke 8100B DMM. This is a Burroughs based Nixie Tube meter. Sadly, this unit will not power up.
FIXED: thanks to Tautech and Paul Moir for their incredible assistance.
Here is a follow up video of it working... Lots of Nixie Tube Porn:https://youtu.be/bOKkrFakrysManual and schematic here:
http://meanmutha.com/fluke_8100b_digital_multimeter.pdfI will post some pictures later. (Pics here now... see below)
I followed the procedure for checking voltages on page 37 of the PDF. On mains power I get ~35V out of the transformer (on either terminal of F2). I have no battery pack, but the unit DOES have the battery option installed. This 35V does seem a little high since it is 24V nominal.
On the -18V rail (case of Q1) I get around -1.7V. I followed the manual and disconnected the 15V side of R5 and hooked it up to a bench power supply. I still get the crazy low reading on the -18V rail.
The power supply schematic is page 89 of the PDF. (and posted below)
I disconnected from the mains and hooked up a bench supply to the battery terminals (as mentioned above this unit has the battery option, but I have no battery pack). I tried voltages from 24V (nominal) to 34V (what the transformer was putting out after rectification). I still get around -0.7 to -1.7V in this configuration.
I swapped out Q2 and Q3, which had no effect.
I measured R1, R2, R3, R4, R5, and R195. All are in spec.
I replaced C58 with a MLCC at 0.1uF (original measure OK too).
I replaced C3 and C5 (electrolytics, whose ESR was a tad higher than normal, but not terrible).
I have a replacement for Q1 on order. I took it out, and it tests OK on the hFE and "GM328 Transistor Tester," but could still be bad I suppose.
Note that testing with either the mains or the power supply attached to the battery terminals results in the meter (m1 on the schem) showing a "charge" up at the high level.
Is there anyone out there with a working 8100 who might be able to take some readings for comparison?
Thoughts?
Thanks.