Another disappointing pile of "test gear" crap from China arrived today. Decided to see if this LCR meter was any good. Wound a T37-6 with 14 turns, expecting a 0.6uH inductance approximately. Measured up at 0.28uH. Hmm.
Dug through the cupboard and found a 1% Cornell Dubilier 100pF silver mica capacitor. Those things are rock solid stable over time.
What did I find? After numerous zeroings? Error!
Get your self one of these three, I can thoroughly recommend them, they can be found on Ebay.
I looked at the XJW01 almost a year ago; then it cost more than the DER EE DE-5000. I was intrigued by what appeared to be a proper shielded 4-wire Kelvin connection, but was leery when I saw it not appearing to be properly grounded in any of the models I looked at. Also, I found mention of a "newer, STM32" version with better firmware that supposedly tested at 100Hz/1KHz/10KHz, (translated schematics for both versions here) but couldn't find anyone promising THAT version on fleaBay, so ran, did not walk in the direction of the DE-5000.
I tripped over a listing FROM Amazon Deals for a couple customer return DE-5000s at 1/2 price, but I wibbled and when I came back they were gone. I camped out on the listing for several months, even set myself a price alert, but they didn't return at that price.
I still don't find any but the STC12-driven version on fleaBay, but I'll admit this newer version with the extruded AL shell is tempting at ~$US70-80. I just find myself looking at the similar function Atlas/Peak LCR45 and knowing how well my ESR70 has served for so many years.
Anybody know anything about this $280 LCR Meter? Or this $350 one?
mnem
*Still kicking myself*
What I like about the XJW01 is the fact that it can fully automatic or you operate manually. I find the auto mode is perfectly acceptable and the screen is illuminated and it displays 7 parameters about the item under test. You simply attach the kelvin clips to the part you want to test and it automatically detect if its a resistor, inductor or a capacitor and select the appropriate mode. The only think you need to do is select the frequency at which to test the capacitors at and thats a single button press that will scroll through the options of 100Hz, 1KHz or 7.8KHz which seems to fit in with most capacitor data sheets I've seen.
The Peak devices give a parameter at a time and you have to scroll through them to get to the one you want.
Of the 3 devices I have, I just did some tests on a known cap, resistor and an unknown inductor...
Transparent case Black case XJW01
10uF 10.32uF 10.23uF 9.74uF
1.3ohm ESR 0.84ohm ESR 1.39ohm ESR
0.6% V Loss 0.5 V Loss 0.79% V Loss
3.298K 3.261K 3.3K 3.296K
Unknown Inductor
Pulled from PCB .08mH .08mH .07mH
The XJW01 is the go to tester on the bench the other 2 are useful for given approx values in circuit or as portables and they also have the added advantage of testing diodes and transistors including MOSFETS and will correctly identify the pin outs and the hfe.
So in practise there is very little between the results they present but sheer speed of testing the XJW01 is the clear winner.
There is connection between the screen on the BNC and mains earth so they are floating and the leakage to ground is 1.2v and that maybe more RF induced then actual mains leakage as the case is plastic on mine but the newer ones are extruded alloy but are powered via a wall wart and / or batteries.