Looking to build a simple ESR meter. Attached is the schematic and parts list, but I can not find a 100ua panel meter locally, but do have a 50ua available. What modifications to the circuit would be needed to accomodate the 50ua vs 100ua.
To be honest with you, that is a bit of a dodgy design. It will do what you want I suppose, and is cheap enough to build, but you will likely blow it up the first time you connect it to a highly charged cap in a power supply. Momentary lapse of concentration and you let the magic smoke out. It happens to us all
A much better piece of kit to build can be found here: **broken link removed**
If you're russian isn't up to it, try google translate
To be honest with you, that is a bit of a dodgy design. It will do what you want I suppose, and is cheap enough to build, but you will likely blow it up the first time you connect it to a highly charged cap in a power supply. Momentary lapse of concentration and you let the magic smoke out. It happens to us all
A much better piece of kit to build can be found here: **broken link removed**
If you're russian isn't up to it, try google translate
Thanks, from the article the author has used the design for a number of years and apparently has proven reliable. Just have to be careful I guess. The AVR- digital project looks neat, but don't want to get tangle up in anything too complicated
As for the meter, simply stick a shunt in parallel with the meter, equal to it's internal resistance (it's how you make a 100uA meter out of a 50uA one).
Thanks Nigel. So for the shunt, just measure the resistance of the meter and then add a equivalant resistor of the measured value in parallel to the meter?
Thanks Nigel. So for the shunt, just measure the resistance of the meter and then add a equivalant resistor of the measured value in parallel to the meter?
Hi Bryan,
I put off building an ESR meter again and again, and finally took the shortcut and bought a kit at Main Electronics. It only took a couple hours to assemble and seems to work well. **broken link removed**
it did take a chunk of coin off me, but I do make good use of it.
Hi Bryan,
I put off building an ESR meter again and again, and finally took the shortcut and bought a kit at Main Electronics. It only took a couple hours to assemble and seems to work well. **broken link removed**
it did take a chunk of coin off me, but I do make good use of it.
Yes, it looks better; I prefer the LCD over the seven segments. There is something about walking in a store (Main Electronics is local) and being able to handle the thing before you buy, and take it home with no wait. Well, at least only a short one while assembling.
EDIT: the one I got you must discharge the caps first; in the one Nigel got you don't have to!
I wondered that, but those are the best datasheets I could find from the numbers, the dual 5V ones are designed for use with micro-controller circuits, and are perhaps used to switch supplies to other parts of the circuit?.
Hi Bryan,
I put off building an ESR meter again and again, and finally took the shortcut and bought a kit at Main Electronics. It only took a couple hours to assemble and seems to work well. **broken link removed**
it did take a chunk of coin off me, but I do make good use of it.
DIY one I made was flakey, bought one off of Ebay MESR-100. Complete piece of rubbish. They do have a newer model, maybe better.
All the time and money and I should have just purchased the Blue Esr. What's your impression of it, accurate, easy to use?. Would you recommend, and trust it.