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Re: reading high voltage
Original poster: "davep by way of Terry Fritz <twftesla-at-qwest-dot-net>" <davep-at-quik-dot-com>
> Well, you shouldn't be looking for a multimeter,
The phrase was:
>> i'm looking to use my multimeter to read high voltage
"looking to use", implicitly to modify, adapt, etc.
> because they do not make multimeter themselves that read
> high voltage. What you need instead is a high voltage
> probe that hooks up to your meter. Or a high voltage
> divider.
Which is what he is asking how to do.
> You could even build a high voltage divider yourself
>>hi all
>>i'm looking to use my multimeter to read high voltage
>>dc and wonderedwhat resistors i should use
>>i am looking for a probe to read 10 kv
Need to know the input resistance/impedance of
the voltmeter to answer that question.
Then it is straight Ohms law, either directly
into the meter input as the lower leg of the
divider, or, better, with a lower leg at
about 1/10 that of the meter input, and an upper
leg calculated from that.
Check the power dissipation, for the chosen
values, and order resistors to suit. Or buy a
probe. For UK, I'd guess MAPLINS would have
summat'.
best
dwp
...the net of a million lies...
Vernor Vinge
There are Many Web Sites which Say Many Things.
-me