I think the blades are one sided edge style connections made of PCBoard material. I could not find a photo showing the other side of those blades. That would clear up the situation.
I think the blades are one sided edge style connections made of PCBoard material. I could not find a photo showing the other side of those blades. That would clear up the situation.
You are correct. I took my TL-21 apart. Sorry I can't post a photo right now.
What I don't understand is why there is no 4 probe accessory and no mention of 4 wire Kelvin type measurement in the operation section of the manual?
Unless those 3 slots are a standard type connector, there is no way to hook up 4 probes.
(edit: I do still need to watch that EEV video, hopefully it will clear everything up)
Originally posted by Enzo
I have a sign in my shop that says, "Never think up reasons not to check something."
Back side of PCB note the 3 connection points at the bottom 2 are split to allow for Kelvin measurements
The last link I posted I think is easier to consume than the video by Dave from eevblog.
nosaj
Thanks nosaj.
Split banana's are definitely new to me. Still think it's very odd there is no mention of it or of an accessory available in the instruction manual.
Originally posted by Enzo
I have a sign in my shop that says, "Never think up reasons not to check something."
It does not seem to have kelvin 4 wire capability. It has 2 probe ports and 'shield'. Only 3 terminals of the meter are used at a time.
On the adapter, the 3 blade terminals are used, the other 3 are 'dummies' and only used for physical support.
[ATTACH=CONFIG]51686[/ATTACH]
Yes it does have four-wire support. I have one too. The flat blades have copper on the two sides, and glass-epoxy PWB material between.
Thanks nosaj.
Split banana's are definitely new to me. Still think it's very odd there is no mention of it or of an accessory available in the instruction manual.
This trick came from General Radio, from which the DE-5000 design came.
Yes, I think this is the only way. I could not find any such thing as a 'split' single banana plug. All searches turn up 'dual banana' plugs, which is a different thing.
I have no idea how they came up with the receptacles (split single banana) on the meter itself and what plug is supposed to mate with it. And if there were such a plug, what would prevent it from rotating so it shorts the 2 sides together?
So, technically, this meter supports 4 wire measurement, but there are no commercially available accessories to do so unless you build your own.
Originally posted by Enzo
I have a sign in my shop that says, "Never think up reasons not to check something."
I looks as if the meter is layed out for 4-wire operation, i.e. separate current source and voltage measuring circuits. As it also allows 2-wire measurement, the banana receptacles need to provide a shorting function when inserting a normal banana plug to connect source and meter circuits.
In other words, the split contact banana receptacles are necessary to allow 4-wire measurement with no bananas inserted.
Once banana plugs are inserted into the +/- receptacles and the 2 halves are shorted, the 4-wire system is converted to a 2-wire configuration.
I looks as if the meter is laid out for 4-wire operation, i.e. separate current source and voltage measuring circuits. As it also allows 2-wire measurement, the banana receptacles need to provide a shorting function when inserting a normal banana plug to connect source and meter circuits.
In other words, the split contact banana receptacles are necessary to allow 4-wire measurement with no bananas inserted.
Once banana plugs are inserted into the +/- receptacles and the 2 halves are shorted, the 4-wire system is converted to a 2-wire configuration.
It appears (page 37 top) that the split-pin banana jacks are used only to compensate paths within the instrument, so no split-pin dual banana plugs are used or provided.
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