Thanks for the video - I was just about to order up the cold spray but I saw the suggestion to save
some $ with the soldering iron - so I gave the soldering iron a shot. Turns out that the adjustment point that was the most voltage sensitive to the heat wasn't the adjustment point that actually adjusts the voltage. Lesson learned.
Turns out that #4 in the photo is voltage, and #3 (just I guessed due to the proximity) is the current. In the process I might have twiddled #2 and #1 a bit - I'm not sure yet what they do, or if I really moved them.
BTW, I thought I needed to get deep into the adjustment point to twist the inner axel but what really goes on is that each adjustment point has outer rim with a cross hatch pattern - so the rim drives the axel.
After figuring this much out I was able to get the voltage to agree with two Voltage Standards and my Fluke 179 to within 1 millivolt (previously I was out by about 6 milliVolts: 2.042 before adjustment vs. 2.048 target on the Voltage Standards). I was concerned because the 2.048 V reference point seemed to be further out than the lower (1 V) and higher ( 3, 5, 10 V) references - but when I got 2.048 nailed the others snapped into alignment surprisingly well. I had previously done this on a Radio Shack DMM and it worked well but the adjustment points on the Tekpower seemed a little less finicky and more linear.
I also was able to dial in the current using #3.
Without knowing what #2 and #1 do I tested some resistors and capacitors. Resistors seemed to line up to within about a tenth of an Ohm and capacitors were good to a nanoFarad or so. Almost hard to believe, I know.
The only thing that has me slightly concerned is that the voltage on the diode setting is only about 1.6 V - not quite enough to illuminate a red LED. The Fluke puts out over 7 Volts.
I'm going to do some more testing and research (read the Tekpower specs if I can find them).
EF
Update - found this Tekpower spec: Diode test: 25uA,3.0V
If anyone has a TP4000ZC (or DT-4000ZC) and can test a LED and regular diode and/or figure out what #2 and #1 do, please post your findings. Thx