Hello,
I'm a owner of an old Chauvin Arnoux benchtop multimeter (french brand)
This multimeter has no documentation available
The problem I have is that after running for a long period of time, the multimeter shows in any range a severe drifting (for example it shows 1,5 V and up in the 20v range) when nothing is plugged in the banana plugs
For the time being I checked and replaced some capacitors (the small electrolytic ones) because I have seen that the two black ones are used to create a virtual ground
For now I haven't tested if the drifting occurs for now
The thing is :
- either old capacitors have their microfarads within specs but an ESR of half an ohm (the new ones for test that are crap from Amazon (rated for audio and KSC branding) have like an ESR of a tenth of a ohm ( tested with an 15$ component tester kit bought on Amazon)
- after the change in cold readings it seems on par with my owon an RS multimeter in the 20 /2 volts and 200mV range
- before the change it was slightly drifted (like 10mV in the 200mV range in cold readings ( the two readings were done with the multimeter shut down for about an hour)
If you want I can do a reverse engineering of it since it has only one big chip that do all the crap ( other components are only passives in the first sight) other than an TL080 op-amp in the bottom corner of the first picture
So do you think these caps could be the culprits?
These caps are 100uf 25V and the white one (changed altogether) is a 220uf 25V
The original brand is soyco for the white and no recognizable brand on the two small ones
The big one is a nichon chemical 2200uf 25V
After checking the photos the main IC is an 7107 marked TSC 7107RCPL and it's vintage is 1989 (same marking for the TL080 )
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