Voltmeter Question

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bgavin
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Re: Voltmeter Question

#16 Post by bgavin »

Ditto for SNOPES
My biggest worry is that when I'm dead and gone, my wife will sell my toys for what I said I paid for them.

Gregory East
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Re: Voltmeter Question

#17 Post by Gregory East »

Harley wrote:
Gregory East wrote:So if I'm understanding it properly ....
Umm... Wikipaedia is not the smartest authority in the world!
So what are you trying to say?
Have I been duped by wikipedia or are all the guys buying "true RMS" meters to set up their pa just wasting money?

cjd
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Re: Voltmeter Question

#18 Post by cjd »

Gregory East wrote: So what are you trying to say?
Have I been duped by wikipedia or are all the guys buying "true RMS" meters to set up their pa just wasting money?
The other meter will give the right answer only under certain conditions. if you inadvertently fail to meet those conditions you may get the wrong answer and never know it (unless maybe your gear gets toasted). So the true RMS meter is safer because it is more accurate under a wider range of conditions. IMHO, definitely worth the money.

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Harley
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Re: Voltmeter Question

#19 Post by Harley »

Gregory East wrote:Have I been duped by wikipedia
Wikipaedia, as I understand it, has all and sundry contributing to it. It's a live encyclopaedia. That means someone can post some :bull: there and you'd be none the wiser.

I liken Wikipaedia to the committe who designed a horse - which you and I would call a camel. :mrgreen:
ImageSemi-retired: Former Australia and New Zealand Authorised BFM cab builder.

Gregory East
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Re: Voltmeter Question

#20 Post by Gregory East »

cjd wrote:
Gregory East wrote: So what are you trying to say?
Have I been duped by wikipedia or are all the guys buying "true RMS" meters to set up their pa just wasting money?
The other meter will give the right answer only under certain conditions. if you inadvertently fail to meet those conditions you may get the wrong answer and never know it (unless maybe your gear gets toasted). So the true RMS meter is safer because it is more accurate under a wider range of conditions. IMHO, definitely worth the money.
What conditions?

A sinewave from a PC signal generator is the perfect match to the "rough enough RMS" meter as I understand it. It assumes the input is a perfect sine whereas the "true" one actually measures the signal and computes it. Or wikipedia is telling lies?

Sydney

Meter Shootout

#21 Post by Sydney »

How about a simple test?
Those with True RMS meters compare voltages of clean sine waves
at relevant frequencies to those not advertised as such.

Ron K
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Re: Voltmeter Question

#22 Post by Ron K »

http://enginova.com/true_rms_volts.htm

A pretty good real world explanation of whats really going on.
Ever since I replaced sex with food I cant even get into my own pants!

Sydney

Almost spooky

#23 Post by Sydney »

Very interesting...
I have being in PM mode w a forum member about this article and the math behind it.
:wink:
( A couple of links in the Ed section fully explain - as Ron said "What's going on" )
Last edited by Sydney on Sun Jul 19, 2009 12:01 pm, edited 2 times in total.

Gregory East
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Re: Voltmeter Question

#24 Post by Gregory East »

What's root mean square again? I thought it was the mean of a rendering A/C into two +ve waves

ie the mean of the square root of squared voltage.

Anyways, bugger square waves, we're not talking about clipped signals. Sydney had the best suggestion in comparing the measurement of a pure sine signal between high falutin' and bargain bin meters.

Sydney

Build a True RMS Audio AC Voltmeter

#25 Post by Sydney »

On a related note:
AudioXpress 7/09 has a True RMS Audio AC Voltmeter construction article using the Analog Devices AD636JH True RMS to DC Converter.
The data sheet notes the formulas behind the transfer function involved.

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thijs666
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Re: Voltmeter Question

#26 Post by thijs666 »

Gregory East wrote:So if I'm understanding it properly a true rms meter is total overkill. They're ALL rms but assume the signal is approximately sinusoidal so feeding a true sinewave gives the exact same result as a flash one with the fancy computer. DOH.
That is what I was trying to say. But you MUST KNOW what/how you are measuring. Sydney is wright in saying a true RMS meter is safer for the 'puppies' :mrgreen: . But since I use sine waves generated with my DDX3216 oscillator, I'm not interested in an expensive true RMS meter (although it would be a nice supplement in my measuring equipment :mrgreen: ).
BF cabs built to date:
2x T48 21" 3015LF; 1x T48 24" 2xBP102; 1x DR250 2510 loaded, cross firing; 4x DR200 Beta 8, melded array; 1x TT HL-10c; 2x WH Beta 8, melded 'array'; 3x AT 15" Tang Band W8-740P; 1x AT 15" JBL GTO1014

Sydney

Re: Voltmeter Question

#27 Post by Sydney »

The Analog Devices AD636JH is only $10 and compared favorably to the HP 3478A used in the article.
Looks like a simple build ( for someone of your skill set )

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