Hi guys,
Need a bit of help here with some Fluke 45 weirdness. I bought a Fluke 45 2nd hand and my initial testing showed no issue with it. All ranges measured fine and, indeed, it is still very accurate compared to my recently calibrated Brymen 867.
However, after using it on the bench for a while (and specifically measuring voltage to the gate of a FET), I noticed that the Fluke 45 was actually
introducing fairly significant voltages
into the circuit. To test it, I hooked the Fluke up to my Philips PM2525 bench meter and set the Philips to fast acquisition mode.
It soon became very clear that, when the Fluke 45 was switching between low ranges, it would output a spike voltage of up to 500mV! It only does this when switching between the 300mV scale and the 3V scale. Selecting a higher scale (e.g. 30V and up), you hear a relay click and all this phantom voltage generation stops happening.
It also looks like this output of voltage is somehow capacitive (i.e. it has a discharge curve and eventually settles down to 0.00mV reading). But that's likely just due to the 20Mohm input resistance of the PM2525. If I don't add that 20Mohm "load" the Fluke 45 takes a lot longer to settle down to zero.
When just measuring a normal voltage source from a PSU set to, say, 150mV, the Fluke reads that fine without any issue. Shorting the input to the Fluke 45 immediately brings it to zero as well.
Here's pic I took immediately after manually switching from the 3V scale to the 300mV scale. This was in manual ranging mode, but the meter does the same thing when it is auto-ranging down on its own. All other scales work perfectly (current, frequency, resistance, etc). It only does this in DC range (when switched to AC, there is no voltage spike being output).
Looking at the front-end, this has to be coming from the components before the analogue processor, correct? Would appreciate if anybody has come across something similar or can offer any insights.
--deckert