Electrical Indicating and Test Instruments 1 Introduction 161


Voltage-to-Frequency Conversion Digital Voltmeter



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Voltage-to-Frequency Conversion Digital Voltmeter


In this instrument, the unknown voltage signal is fed via a range switch and an amplifier into a converter circuit whose output is in the form of a train of voltage pulses at a frequency proportional to the magnitude of the input signal. The main advantage of this type of DVM is its ability to reject a.c. noise.







Digital Multimeter


This is an extension of the DVM. It can measure both a.c. and d.c. voltages over a number of ranges through inclusion within it of a set of switchable amplifiers and attenuators. It is used widely in circuit test applications as an alternative to the analogue multimeter and includes protection circuits that prevent damage if high voltages are applied to the wrong range.





Figure 7.1. Output–time relationship for an integrator in a dual-slope digital voltmeter.




Analogue Meters


Despite the technical superiority of digital meters, particularly in terms of their greater accuracy and much higher input impedance, analogue meters continue to be used in a significant number of applications. First, they are often preferred as indicators in system control panels. This is because deviations of controlled parameters away from the normal expected range are spotted more easily by a pointer moving against a scale in an analogue meter rather than by variations in the numeric output display of a digital meter. A typical, commercially available analogue panel meter is shown in Figure 7.2. Analogue instruments also tend to suffer less from noise and isolation problems, which favor their use in some applications. In addition, because analogue instruments are usually passive instruments that do not need a power supply, this is often very useful in measurement applications where a suitable main power supply is not readily available. Many examples of analogue meters also remain in use for historical reasons.
Analogue meters are electromechanical devices that drive a pointer against a scale. They are prone to measurement errors from a number of sources that include inaccurate scale marking during manufacture, bearing friction, bent pointers, and ambient temperature variations.
Further human errors are introduced through parallax error (not reading the scale from directly above) and mistakes in interpolating between scale markings. Quoted inaccuracy values are between 0.1 and 3%. Various types of analogue meters are used as discussed here.



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