Re: Ammeter Setup not Behaving
I still have some current clamps available.
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Re: Ammeter Setup not Behaving
Yeah, my meter is scaled up to 50A with overload to 100. If you recommend a 50/5A CT those are pretty easy to secure on ebay for about $15 each thankfully.
As for the resistor I poked at the meter terminals (with the shunt disconnected) and a readong of 0.5 ohms means there shouldn't be anything in there.
I don't have anything variable enough in the house to peg the scale. My bench supply can deliver the voltage but only 3A max. Even if I turn off current limiting and even slightly turn up the voltage the current draw almost immediately pegs the output limit of the supply. I suspect too that this expects 5A.Last edited by pentium; 01-28-2013, 02:05 PM.
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Re: Ammeter Setup not Behaving
I did some research, because when I worked in substations there are dozens of these meters and I never really paid attention to them...except when they read zero and it all hits the fan...
The seller has an AC panel meter mixed with a DC shunt- together they will not work.
The panel meter is a typical DIN 96mm used in the electrical utility industry, which has many standards to keep things compatible, so real specs (ohms, volts, amps) you will not find.
From your pic, the symbols on the faceplate bottom left tell you the beast is: Moving Iron type, Accuracy Class 1.5 to DIN43780, vertical mount, dielectric strength 2.5kV AC
Moving-iron meters work with AC or DC and I'm wrong about it needing rectifier diodes (moving coil meters need these)
The standard to drive these is a 5A CT, although some meters are for 1A CT's. I'm not sure, your meter looks like a 50A scale one with overload room to 100A. I would try hook it up to a (split-core) 50/5A CT. In other words 50A gives 5A to the meter. A 100A CT with two turns feeding it, could also work.
I'm not sure about the burden resistor. If it's in the meter, then no prob. - but without it it is easy to peg the meter playing around. Take an ohmeter reading on the meter (sans shunt), figure what makes it read full scale if you can.
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Re: Ammeter Setup not Behaving
The ammeters are screwed together with four screws, one of which is covered by a warranty sticker. I topen the ammeter I commit to keeping it.
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Re: Ammeter Setup not Behaving
Is the meter easy to pull apart without damaging it? Will you be returning these as "not as described"?
I'm still curious as to how the seller thought this should work...is there any presence of a permanent magnetic field on the meter? Maybe the meter is supposed to be a DC ammeter and they misadvertised as AC?
As for the current transformer you'll need to figure out what you want as the readout first...
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Re: Ammeter Setup not Behaving
hYou can also set you DMM to AC mV scale and take voltage reading across the shunt to see if it is the correct shunt.
12.5A = 18.75mV
Tested the shunts both with and without a load and yes, 12.5A load = 18.75mv across the shunt so we know the shunt is behaving and it's the correct one.
However you're telling me that because the ammeter lacks rectification the shunt will not work with it and instead I need a current transformer instead. What exactly should I be looking for? Ebay's got a heck of a selection. Something like this? What should I be looking for?Last edited by pentium; 01-26-2013, 06:00 PM.
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Re: Ammeter Setup not Behaving
The fixed 0.1V seems kind of wrong, you should see a different voltage across the shunt depending on load (V=IR. If R is constant, V is dependent on I. If it was 75mV = 50A * R, R is 1.5 milliohms!). The scope should be able to detect an AC voltage though it would be fairly low, depending on the amplifiers on the scope may barely register it. If you apply a 10 amp 1200W load assuming 120VAC RMS, you'd get 15 millivolts. On my analog scope, this is only one and a half divisions on the 0.01 scale, which is the lowest it will go.)
Warning: Using the scope for this is VERY dangerous as many scope's GND tends not to be isolated!!!
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Re: Ammeter Setup not Behaving
Analog meters has their best accuracy at 70% of their scale.
The house hold power are not capable to even feed correctly those meters.
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Re: Ammeter Setup not Behaving
All of my bench tools and power supplies are still in storage from a move last month. The most accessible thing I got besides my DMM is my oscilloscope. :/
If reading from one side of the shunt to the other side you only see a 0.1v voltage. regardless of load. I do have a more accurate DMM somewhere but I think it is packed away too.
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Re: Ammeter Setup not Behaving
This is dangerous but have you tried measuring the voltage across the shunts with a DMM?
Could you get a 75 mV AC source to see if the meter actually works (low voltage transformer plus a resistor divider, and use a DMM as a measurement standard)? Though it may be right that it has diodes but I'd give it benefit of the doubt and it could be permanent magnetless meter and thus able to measure AC directly... If it's not, it should go right back into the mail for a refund...
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Re: Ammeter Setup not Behaving
I just moved and this was part of setting the workshop up. The signal generator is currently buried in a storage nook. At this point it's too late for me to redo the system with CT's so I'll have to accomidate for an op-amp rectification.
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Re: Ammeter Setup not Behaving
At only 75mV full scale at 50A, that is not enough to bias on the rectifier diode (Typical Diode has Vf of about .6V (600mV), you need at least 1.2V to turn on two Diodes in bridge rectifier. You are better off using CT setup.
I do not see how they can be selling the meter like that to be used with 75mV/50A shunt without active electronics to drive the meter. I still like tosee what happen if you feed the meter with signal generator to find out what the sensitivity is.Last edited by budm; 01-24-2013, 11:08 AM.
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Re: Ammeter Setup not Behaving
You need a resistor to set the scale factor and they output AC.
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Re: Ammeter Setup not Behaving
Are they "wire up and you're ready" things? I opted out of buying them originally because I could find no mention that they were what I required for the meters or that they were compatible.
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Re: Ammeter Setup not Behaving
I may have some Taewhatrans TS-10L current transformers available. Whole box of 80 at home, but I've got a few here too. They've got a 3000:1 ratio and can do up to 7V output (internal zener clamp prevents higher.)
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Re: Ammeter Setup not Behaving
mV shunts are for metering DC current, or AC current if you have electronics (op-amps) to rectify.
The panel meters need a current transformer with burden resistor, feeding them. CT's can generate several volts since they are constant-current devices and this overcomes the voltage drop in the panel meter's (internal) diode rectifier.
I drew a schematic of what possibly is going on. In simple terms, I would go with CT's.
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Re: Ammeter Setup not Behaving
Do you have any signal generator that can put out 60Hz? You can use that to simulate the 75mV R.M.S. (211.5 V P-P) AC to feed the meter and see if it will display full scale.
You can also set you DMM to AC mV scale and take voltage reading across the shunt to see if it is the correct shunt.
25A = 37.5mV
12.5A = 18.75mV
6.25A = 9.375mVLast edited by budm; 01-24-2013, 01:32 AM.
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Re: Ammeter Setup not Behaving
It's 50A. You can ebay search the 200A shunt and you can see the difference. There's a few sellers using the same description template and they all have the same error.
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Re: Ammeter Setup not Behaving
The spec of the shunt is confusing: Is it 200A or 50A rating?
Description
Specifications:
This is a bid of a 200A, 75mV DC current shunt.
Ideal for use with:Use for DC digital Amp Meter.
Use for Analog Amp Meter.
Color: Silver
Item size: 115*24*17mm
Package included:
1 x 50A 75mV DC current shuntLast edited by budm; 01-23-2013, 11:25 PM.
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Re: Ammeter Setup not Behaving
Specs for the ammeters said that they required the use of 50A 75mv shunts which had to be ordered separately but only cost a few dollars more.
The ammeters came from here.
The shunts came from here.
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