EK001
Electrical
- Jun 9, 2021
- 2
Hi Everyone,
I went through thread248-419502 and I have a very similar situation where I need to measure the temperature at the point where the conductor enters a connector for UL requirements.
I am using a battery operated Fluke 54-2 digital input thermometer with a Type K exposed/bare wire thermocouple as this is how testing is done at UL as well. The thermocouple is attached (using Loctite 382) to the bare live conductor right at the point where it enters the connector.
AC and DC are both allowed for the testing however UL uses as low voltage high current AC source but I have a low voltage high current DC source and need to a test at 20A. The DC PSU is isolated as the negative is not tied to ground.
With an isolated DC PSU and a battery powered digital thermometer, are there any issues I can incur with the thermocouple being adhered to the live conductor directly? Do you foresee any issues with stray currents or potential damage to the digital thermometer? Since everything is isolated my guess is that I should be OK but I wanted to know if anyone else had experience with such testing before I go ahead and actually conduct a test.
Thank you.
I went through thread248-419502 and I have a very similar situation where I need to measure the temperature at the point where the conductor enters a connector for UL requirements.
I am using a battery operated Fluke 54-2 digital input thermometer with a Type K exposed/bare wire thermocouple as this is how testing is done at UL as well. The thermocouple is attached (using Loctite 382) to the bare live conductor right at the point where it enters the connector.
AC and DC are both allowed for the testing however UL uses as low voltage high current AC source but I have a low voltage high current DC source and need to a test at 20A. The DC PSU is isolated as the negative is not tied to ground.
With an isolated DC PSU and a battery powered digital thermometer, are there any issues I can incur with the thermocouple being adhered to the live conductor directly? Do you foresee any issues with stray currents or potential damage to the digital thermometer? Since everything is isolated my guess is that I should be OK but I wanted to know if anyone else had experience with such testing before I go ahead and actually conduct a test.
Thank you.