Yesterday, I was making up some #4 AWG cables for one of my tank lights. It's a soldered joint. For this size cable, I use a micro torch because my 50 watt Hakko station just doesn't cut it. I filled the contact solder cup with just the right amount of solder. I then used a bit of liquid flux on the bare cable and used my homemade solder pot to tin the 5/8" length of bare cable. With the contact in my vice squeezed by wood blocks, I re-heated the contact cup and slowly dipped the tinned cable into the cup - and kept the torch on the contact for about 5 seconds to allow the cable to heat up properly.
I've never had a quality Ohm meter so I've never tested any of my joints. So I tested this one using the 2-wire probes. I was surprised and disappointed to see 0.033 Ohms measured from a bit of bare cable behind the joint and the contact rubbing surface - about 1 1/2" total length. I was in Auto Scale and Auto Zero. I thought about this last night and was feeling pretty bad about my soldering abilities. Today, I remembered that I didn't do a "zeroing" of the probes before I took my measurements. So I fired up the meter, punched in 2-wire Ohms and put the probes together and got a .030 reading. I then realized I didn't know how to zero the meter. So I thought that the Null function might do the trick. I went through this and ended up getting .0000 when the probes were touched together. Then I measured my joint but this time, including 9' of cable and got a between 0.009 and 0.010 Ohms. But I really don't know if the Null function is what I should be doing or if the "Auto Zero" function is already taking care of zeroing the meter. But if so, then why do I get 0.030 when touching the probes together?
I tried reading about this in the manual but just can't seem to understand what the below paragraph from the manual is telling me.
Step 5: Specify whether you want to use Auto Zero. Autozero provides the most accurate measurements, but
requires additional time to perform the zero measurement. Note that there is no autozero setting for 4-wire resistance
measurements.
With autozero enabled, the DMM internally measures the offset following each measurement. It then subtracts that
measurement from the preceding reading. This prevents offset voltages present on the DMM’s input circuitry from
affecting measurement accuracy. With autozero disabled, the DMM measures the offset once and subtracts the offset
from all subsequent measurements. The DMM takes a new offset measurement each time you change the function,
range, or integration time.
Can someone tell me the proper setup and procedure to take a 2-wire Ohm measurement with this meter? Maybe with and without Auto Zero enabled?