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4hv.org :: Forums :: General Science and Electronics
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analog meter for capacitor readings

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guitarlord66
Thu Feb 26 2009, 01:33AM Print
guitarlord66 Registered Member #1805 Joined: Sat Nov 08 2008, 06:29AM
Location:
Posts: 67
Hey, cheesey

I've taken a analog meter out of an old cassette player and was wondering can I use this to measure the voltage accross my capacitor bank as it chargers to a max of 400v? What kind of resistor or something would I need to use? It doesnt have numbers on it but I can add my own when I know where 100v, 200v, 300v and 400v are going to be. I've tried googling but couldnt find anything, thanks.

Heres some pics of it -
LGIM0175
LGIM0176
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LithiumLord
Thu Feb 26 2009, 02:06AM
LithiumLord Registered Member #1739 Joined: Fri Oct 03 2008, 10:05AM
Location: Moscow, Russia
Posts: 261
hehe I used the same thing a while ago :) Those things have a very low voltage to represent the maximum reading, so you only have to rely on current (what is tens of mV compared to your power supply anyway ;) ). Connect it to a low voltage source via a variable resistor and set the knob so that the needle is at the max. You have two alternatives in fact - either measure the current if you have a good enough meter or the resistance of the pot you've set up (needs like 10-20v of the power supply, the pot should be like 100-200k or more). The current will be pretty low, so if you feel like you don't want such a big resistor (I used like 1.5MOhm for 170vdc max) you can boost the gauge's own resistance by a shunt.
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