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Same here by TDS420, Other TDS420A with damage input hybride (overvoltage)Swapping of Hybride , which is soldered, is hateful jobs.Then is one other hybride dead, oh no, fucking again heavy desoldering: I take plier and knack him. It is out. It is out!!
Quote from: worsthorse on November 18, 2019, 05:50:52 amNow I just need to find someone locally that has a good calibrated DMM so I can calibrate my new calibrator and then calibrate all my DMMs. And so it begins...
Now I just need to find someone locally that has a good calibrated DMM so I can calibrate my new calibrator and then calibrate all my DMMs.
Quote from: worsthorse on November 18, 2019, 05:50:52 amIt wasn't as inexpensive as I would like but much less expensive than they are currently seem to be going for. I lost out on one a couple of weeks ago that cost almost as much being sold without any testing. Now I just need to find someone locally that has a good calibrated DMM so I can calibrate my new calibrator and then calibrate all my DMMs. As your calibrator exceeds the digits on your Fluke you obviously NEED 6 1/2 digits + Seriously given you are in the USA and that you now have a calibrator consider a one time calibration of the Fluke then apply that known back across your gear using the new Calibrator as part of that. The costs in the USA are typically a lot better than in Oz for example.This is what I have been doing with my recently calibrated 34401A and 34461A using the pair of them to improve the level of confidence as I go over the other Calibrators and references I have. Next years plan will at this stage get only one of them re calibrated do an initial check against the other then go over the fleet again. Yes it is a circular Rabbit Hole
It wasn't as inexpensive as I would like but much less expensive than they are currently seem to be going for. I lost out on one a couple of weeks ago that cost almost as much being sold without any testing. Now I just need to find someone locally that has a good calibrated DMM so I can calibrate my new calibrator and then calibrate all my DMMs.
Quote from: beanflying on November 18, 2019, 09:02:04 amAs your calibrator exceeds the digits on your Fluke you obviously NEED 6 1/2 digits + There you go pushing drugs again. Quote from: beanflying on November 18, 2019, 09:02:04 amSeriously given you are in the USA and that you now have a calibrator consider a one time calibration of the Fluke then apply that known back across your gear using the new Calibrator as part of that. The costs in the USA are typically a lot better than in Oz for example.This is what I have been doing with my recently calibrated 34401A and 34461A using the pair of them to improve the level of confidence as I go over the other Calibrators and references I have. Next years plan will at this stage get only one of them re calibrated do an initial check against the other then go over the fleet again. Yes it is a circular Rabbit Hole With my considerable cross-checking the level of confidence here is 98-99% WITHOUT 6.5 digits.
As your calibrator exceeds the digits on your Fluke you obviously NEED 6 1/2 digits +
Seriously given you are in the USA and that you now have a calibrator consider a one time calibration of the Fluke then apply that known back across your gear using the new Calibrator as part of that. The costs in the USA are typically a lot better than in Oz for example.This is what I have been doing with my recently calibrated 34401A and 34461A using the pair of them to improve the level of confidence as I go over the other Calibrators and references I have. Next years plan will at this stage get only one of them re calibrated do an initial check against the other then go over the fleet again. Yes it is a circular Rabbit Hole
Matt, bec. you are owner of a 523B you can calibrate for me the 200cd
I've considered that, too, except I don't know which instrument should be the starting point as the "precision voltage sources" I own, other than the DMM CheckPlus don't have a reliable calibration and don't go high enough (and the CheckPlus is only 5V).That said, I don't need 6.5 digits. For anything. I could paint over all the digits after x.xx on all of my calculators and meters and be perfectly happy.
I fetched up two capacitor decades on ebay -from UK:Does anyone know the companies shown on the plates?:Different sellers, different auctions.One for £24,99 and the other one for £19,99.Nobody seemed to be interested in those. They both were a buy now offer that had already run several days.I tested them with my HP 4362A LCR meter and they both are within their 1% spec! The larger one with the 50pf to 160pf vernier was offered 'for parts or not working' and it was indeed.But nothing serious: One capacitor connector was broken what could be fixed with a little soldering job.
Quote from: Martin.M on November 18, 2019, 06:14:45 pmMatt, bec. you are owner of a 523B you can calibrate for me the 200cd No, i have HP 523C , not B-models
I've considered that, too, except I don't know which instrument should be the starting point as the "precision voltage sources" I own, other than the DMM CheckPlus don't have a reliable calibration and don't go high enough (and the CheckPlus is only 5V).
Quote from: madao on November 18, 2019, 07:06:49 pmQuote from: Martin.M on November 18, 2019, 06:14:45 pmMatt, bec. you are owner of a 523B you can calibrate for me the 200cd No, i have HP 523C , not B-models and the 521 is a 5 digits, the 523B a 6 digits counter
There is something like 20dBm attenuation in the lower frequency range. The good news is that the mixer sitting just behind the limiter is fine. Someone probably did a big mistake and connected some high power source on the input. The limiter did it job and died protecting the rest of the instrument.
Quote from: Kosmic on November 19, 2019, 03:51:44 amThere is something like 20dBm attenuation in the lower frequency range. The good news is that the mixer sitting just behind the limiter is fine. Someone probably did a big mistake and connected some high power source on the input. The limiter did it job and died protecting the rest of the instrument.Possible, but if you haven't already, worth checking the solder joints to the connectors and such carefully - a little break in a conductor can make a pretty convincing high pass filter. Could even be a cheaper fix than replacing the limiter!
Modern day Ben Franklin?
Yeah this one will do it: