1 / 14

ELECTRICAL CIRCUITS

ELECTRICAL CIRCUITS. Multimeter. OUTLINE. Purpose Measuring Voltage Measuring Current Measuring Resistance. Purpose. The purpose of a Multimeter is to measure voltage, current and resistance The proper selection for what you are measuring must be selected V dc V ac R A dc A ac

rpamela
Télécharger la présentation

ELECTRICAL CIRCUITS

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. ELECTRICAL CIRCUITS Multimeter

  2. OUTLINE • Purpose • Measuring Voltage • Measuring Current • Measuring Resistance

  3. Purpose • The purpose of a Multimeter is to measure voltage, current and resistance • The proper selection for what you are measuring must be selected • V dc • V ac • R • A dc • A ac • In this course we will only be measuring DC

  4. Measuring Voltage • Set the Multimeter to Vdc • Attach the two probes, black to “COM” or “ground”, and the red to the port labelled “V” or “Volts” • The number on the screen is the voltage reading for that power supply

  5. Measuring Voltage • Reversing the probes will display a negative value on the screen • Notice that it is the same voltage, just a change in polarity

  6. Measuring Voltage • Voltage can be measured whether the power supply is being used in a circuit or not • It can also be used to measure the voltage drop across any element of a circuit

  7. Measuring Voltage • Question • If the Multimeter displays 10.8 from the setup on the left, and 12.3 from the setup on the right, what would the Multimeter display if the probes were placed on the two legs of the LED?

  8. Measuring Voltage • Answer • Since the two elements are in series, and there is a total of 12.3 volts from the power supply, if the first element (a resistor) used up 10.8 volts, then the second element (an LED) would have to use up the remaining 1.5

  9. Measuring Current • Depending on how much current we are measuring, we might use the “A dc” setting or the “mA dc” (milliamps) setting • If we are not sure how much current we will be measuring, always select the larger, “A”, setting • Connect the red probe to the appropriate current port, either “A” or “mA”

  10. Measuring Current • When measuring current it is important to NEVER place the probes directly on the two battery terminals • This will cause a short circuit • Remember V = I * R • If our resistance goes down to zero, then our current, I, goes up to infinity

  11. Measuring Current • To measure current we always make the Multimeter “an element of the circuit” • i.e. – break the circuit and use the Multimeter to complete it

  12. Measuring Current • Since we are measuring such a small current, we can get a more accurate reading by switching the Multimeter and probe to the “mA” settings

  13. Measuring Current =

  14. Measuring Resistance • To measure Resistance we simply select the resistance setting on the meter, and Ω port for the probe • Resistance is measured with no power supply in the circuit

More Related