On Wed, 28 May 2008, korgpolyex800 wrote:
> A good multimeter will usually give you bad measurements when the
> current you're measuring is under a millivolt. The resistance in the
> leads and in the current shunt within the meter will drop the reading.
===============
mA??
my DMM has a current scale that ranges from (up to) 10A down to 200uA.
sure, the resistance of the leads, the shunt, and also the inductance of
the leads will all lead to an "impure" reading, but you're still applying
battery voltage to the circuit, and the circuit will draw what it draws...
and within a reasonable margin of error you can read that with a good DMM,
down to a little less than 1uA. the 4-100uA range that you're trying to
achieve shouldn't pose a problem, unless you're trying to use an analog
meter, or a $5 special.
--
...atom
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