Electrical Indicating and Test Instruments 1 Introduction 161



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1- MAQALA




Digital Meters


All types of digital meters are basically modified forms of the digital voltmeter (DVM), irrespective of the quantity that they are designed to measure. Digital meters designed to measure quantities other than voltage are, in fact, digital voltmeters that contain appropriate electrical circuits to convert current or resistance measurement signals into voltage signals. Digital multimeters are also essentially digital voltmeters that contain several conversion circuits, thus allowing the measurement of voltage, current, and resistance within one instrument.
Digital meters have been developed to satisfy a need for higher measurement accuracies and a faster speed of response to voltage changes than can be achieved with analogue instruments. They are technically superior to analogue meters in almost every respect. The binary nature of the output reading from a digital instrument can be applied readily to a display that is in the form of discrete numerals. Where human operators are required to measure and record signal voltage levels, this form of output makes an important contribution to measurement reliability and accuracy, as the problem of analogue meter parallax error is eliminated and the possibility of gross error through misreading the meter output is reduced greatly. The availability in many instruments of a direct output in digital form is also very useful in the rapidly expanding range of computer control applications. Quoted inaccuracy values are between 0.005% (measuring d.c. voltages) and 2%. Digital meters also have very high input impedance
(10 MO compared with 1—20 KO for analogue meters), which avoids the measurement system loading problem (see Chapter 3) that occurs frequently when analogue meters are used.
Additional advantages of digital meters are their ability to measure signals of frequency up to 1 MHz and the common inclusion of features such as automatic ranging, which prevents overload and reverse polarity connection, etc.
The major part of a digital voltmeter is the circuitry that converts the analogue voltage being measured into a digital quantity. Asthe instrumentonly measures d.c. quantities in its basic mode, another necessary component within it is one that performs a.c.–d.c. conversion and thereby gives it the capacity to measure a.c. signals. After conversion, the voltage value is displayed by means of indicating tubes or a set of solid-state light-emitting diodes. Four-, five-, or even six-figure output displays are used commonly, and although the instrument itself may not be inherently more accurate than some analogue types, this form of display enables measurements to be recorded with much greater accuracy than that obtainable by reading an analogue meter scale.
Digital voltmeters differ mainly in the technique used to affect the analogue-to-digital conversion between the measured analogue voltage and the output digital reading. As a general rule, the more expensive and complicated conversion methods achieve a faster conversion speed. Some common types of DVM are discussed here.

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