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MEXICOWANDERER wrote:
TWELVE VOLTS is the power supply for this PANEL meter. It is not hand-held.
The MEASUREMENT CIRCUIT is an entirely different portion of the meter. It will measure from 0.000 to 33.0 volts.
Absolutely different than standard 12-volt PANEL meters, this one can measure voltage DROP. It is not meant to substitute running around with a 9-volt battery hand held meter, measuring voltage drop.
But it WILL measure voltage DROP between batteries, between battery banks, between bank and inverter, solar panel arrays to 33.0 volts. Voltage drop. Problems with MPPT and PWM controllers.
MEXICOWANDERER wrote:
If anyone thinks their FLUKE meter is as accurate as a 100 MHz Tektronix oscilloscope or a hundred plus dollar array of 10ppm calibration resistors, please let me know.
The issue is over VALUE not superlative based quantification.
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โMay-31-2016 08:08 PM
SCVJeff wrote:smkettner wrote:.5 ? :C
One digit is enough to tell me what is happening.
โMay-31-2016 07:07 PM
landyacht318 wrote:Exactly. If I wanted to check the calibration I'd compare it to my Fluke and certainly not the other way around.
How is it known this meter is indeed accurate? They do not seem to have a calibration pot.