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Setting gain on amp with multimeter
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<blockquote data-quote="Lasherž" data-source="post: 8706042" data-attributes="member: 679555"><p>Ah I see, that's very interesting. I guess what it boils down to though is that the company which made the nameplate isn't using the right tools, no? I mean Fluke is basically saying our tool is more accurate than the tool they used to make the manual so you should use a lesser tool for that. True RMS should give more accurate results for variable frequency drives than without.</p><p></p><p>I never thought about it that way, with companies actually using non-rms tools and then conflicting with your more accurate one. I guess it makes sense to ditch rms in that regard. I'll say though if you want real values rather than "reference to company values" and you've got RMS vs non-RMS, RMS is always going to be the more 'technically correct' reading.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Lasherž, post: 8706042, member: 679555"] Ah I see, that's very interesting. I guess what it boils down to though is that the company which made the nameplate isn't using the right tools, no? I mean Fluke is basically saying our tool is more accurate than the tool they used to make the manual so you should use a lesser tool for that. True RMS should give more accurate results for variable frequency drives than without. I never thought about it that way, with companies actually using non-rms tools and then conflicting with your more accurate one. I guess it makes sense to ditch rms in that regard. I'll say though if you want real values rather than "reference to company values" and you've got RMS vs non-RMS, RMS is always going to be the more 'technically correct' reading. [/QUOTE]
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Setting gain on amp with multimeter
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