doughere wrote:
Your shunt is a resistor. Your ammeter is actually a voltmeter reading the drop across your shunt. If you know the shunt's value (usually expressed as Amp to millivolt drop) you can read the voltage across the shunt and calculate the Amperage. My shunt is 50 Amp to 50 mV; so if the volt reading across the shunt is 35 mV, my meter should read 35 Amps. The most common shunts are designed for 50 or 100 mV at max current reading.
Doug
Doug if I understand your post if I take a voltage reading between the two large nuts across the shunt(as shown in BFL's post)and trust my voltmeter I could adjust the amp pot to match that reading. Is that what you are saying?