On Sun, 27 Aug 2006 01:03:51 +0200, Steve Greenfield
<
alienrelics@...> wrote:
> Regular price $40, I was just there and found it was down to
> $26.99. A thermocouple is a tiny junction of two metals that makes
> part of a highly accurate thermometer that can stand -very- high
> temperatures.
You can also sometimes find type-k temperature ranges on multimeters. VERY
useful, especially if it has PC link and/or min/max functions. You could
use any meter sensitive enough, but it is nice to read degrees straight
off the display. If the meter has cold junction compensation that's even
better. One of mine doesn't and i found that out the hard way when it
showed below freezing room temperature after i had just charged the
battery and the meter was warm.
What probe does your meter use? I use an exposed junction most often, but
plan to make one with a little contact plate since i now have the battery
welder.
> It has some funky cheapo connections on the meter, I figure I can
> replace those easily enough with something standard. Even a 1/8"
> jack, as long as it's close enough to the cold junction
> compensation.
The plugs they usually use here are flimsy looking yellow things with flat
contacts, those are the same material as the wires. But as you say near
the cold junction it does not matter, i use standard 4mm plugs. (our old
power plugs are 19mm prong distance and 4mm prongs so will fit most
multimeters, i use those sometimes rather than two individual plugs)
Thermocouples are good things, i never felt the need to get an optical
thermometer...
ST