What I've found:
I'm measuring the frequency in a step-up converter (around 17.5kHz which is to be expected, C3=2.2nF) and after a few seconds the display is showing only zeros. I'm measuring between R4 and the bases of T3 and T4.
On the other side, when I'm measuring the 50Hz hum with the probe in my hand, the digits will stay.
This may be because you have a DC offset on the signal.
Thanks, you are right. I've put a 4.7µF capacitor between
and the display stays at 17.588kHz without any blinking or something.
Is this a behaviour which should to be expected?
Yes.
That seems to be the very same overload problem (AC +DC) we're discussing in the other thread (new eevBlog DMM).
Op1 inside the HY3131 goes in saturation with DC offset, therefore the comparator which produces the count signal, stays at high level.
Overload condition is not detected, because comparator is used for frequency detection.
Frank
I think the problem here might be slightly different. OP1 does not seem to be involved in the Hz mode. And what puzzled me is in BU508A’s video the frequency is actually measured correctly for 5 sec or so.
If the 121gw schematics is correct - the input signal comes in at R RLD and through the U9 switches to RLD1 and then AC coupled with C32 into the CNT counter pin on hy3131.
While U9 will likely clip the signal if it goes beyond 0 - 3.6V. Else D7-D8 will certainly clip it at about -0.6 and 4.2V.
But I’m thinking this is probably a problem also related to non symmetrical pulse shaped signals - which in this case causes C32 to slowly charge to a DC offset level where the signal no longer can trigger the CNT input. According to hy3131 datasheet it requires a high level >2.4V and low level <1.3V, so 1.1V peak to peak for a symmetrical signal.
The 121gw manual does not seem to state minimum voltage required for the Hz mode - but I measured it quite exactly to those 1.1V p-p. And for an asymmetrical signal i.e. square wave with 10% duty cycle it’s about 2.8V p-p.
I would actually recommend using ACV mode if you only want to measure frequency and not the duty cycle and such. In the lowest 5.0000V range the 2nd display for frequency only require about 0.4V p-p to trigger. Though also here a DC offset can/will cause problems.