archibaldtuttle
Materials
- Oct 27, 2012
- 15
sorry, cross posted this from electrical engineering froum, didn't see this measurement and control forum.
testing the current loop tester. how important?
i'm looking at the extech line of PRC testers that can provide source and sensor simulation for 4-20ma current loop, voltage measuring sensor regimes and thermistor applications. This is no small investment for occasional field use but i find that, unlike combustion sensing applications that are pushing out to 5 and 10 year calibration intervals Extech wants this to be calibrated every year. my feeling is that they are thinking about much more critical applications than my field work. the specfied accuracies are with hundreth of a percent for most applications and i could handle within 5% so 2 orders of magnitude less accuracy. I'm thinking i ought to just be able to test a few known standards to confirm that i'm within tolerable accuracy because they will want half of what the meter costs to calibrate it every year . . . not to mention the fuss of sending it there and back.
anyone dealt with one of these or something similar from another manufacturer. while its a serious investment this seems to be reasonably priced for the capability but i'm open, of course, to simple alternatives that perhaps aren't built as accurately as this one to begin with. but most of what i find is more expensive or very cheap alternatives that don't have both the source and sensor capabilities.
thanks for any thoughts.
brian
testing the current loop tester. how important?
i'm looking at the extech line of PRC testers that can provide source and sensor simulation for 4-20ma current loop, voltage measuring sensor regimes and thermistor applications. This is no small investment for occasional field use but i find that, unlike combustion sensing applications that are pushing out to 5 and 10 year calibration intervals Extech wants this to be calibrated every year. my feeling is that they are thinking about much more critical applications than my field work. the specfied accuracies are with hundreth of a percent for most applications and i could handle within 5% so 2 orders of magnitude less accuracy. I'm thinking i ought to just be able to test a few known standards to confirm that i'm within tolerable accuracy because they will want half of what the meter costs to calibrate it every year . . . not to mention the fuss of sending it there and back.
anyone dealt with one of these or something similar from another manufacturer. while its a serious investment this seems to be reasonably priced for the capability but i'm open, of course, to simple alternatives that perhaps aren't built as accurately as this one to begin with. but most of what i find is more expensive or very cheap alternatives that don't have both the source and sensor capabilities.
thanks for any thoughts.
brian