I spent a lot of time on the teardown video going through most of the meter in a bit of detail, so I won't waste a ton of space on words here, if you're interested in my thoughts, watch the video:
Full gallery of photos is
here, all pictures below link to full (ie. huge) images.
Any thoughts on why there's a backup battery in here? There are at least two separate EEPROMs in the meter visible in this shot.
High impedance madness! Is that the reference in the machined can? If you look closely at the full-res shot, you can even see a resistor crammed in directly between the pin and the board. What are those black bricks (there are 3 that look similar around the meter)?
Hang on a second... what on Earth is going on with those ceramic things? The curlies had me confused for a while, but they must be for strain / vibration tolerance - not sure what these things are doing though, they don't seem to have any components on them.
Some interesting ceramic transistor carriers.
Haven't seen this sort of isolation before, but they use a copy of it on each board (digital and analog). I suppose they're isolating the same lines on both boards - either that or there are actually 6 lines, with 3 isolated on each board. Also wondering what the paper-like flat part is, marked M003 in this shot, there are a few similar devices scattered in this section.
Can anyone tell me what's up with the capacitor top right (potted looking black thing beside the big hybrid)? Never seen a capacitor potted like that before, what's the dielectric? It's 33nF, IIRC 50V.
These 5x7 dot matrix LED arrays used for units display are fantastic looking, and I didn't know about them before. Very tiny LED dies too. Interesting.
And we'll end with an action shot.
A neat meter and fun to look at inside.