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C1gmlm May 23rd 04 11:33 PM

Resistance Question
 
My electronic module went bad on my Cold Machine and the shop suggested that I
check the resistance of the compressor. When I check the resistance between 2
of the points my meter shows .8 ohms. When I touch the 2 leads of the tester
together I get a .4 reading. Do I subtract .4 from the original reading to get
the true resistance in the compressor? I have 3 different points to to check.
Thanks

Mike

Steve Daniels, Seek of Spam May 23rd 04 11:45 PM

Resistance Question
 
On 23 May 2004 22:33:59 GMT, something compelled
(C1gmlm), to say:

My electronic module went bad on my Cold Machine and the shop suggested that I
check the resistance of the compressor. When I check the resistance between 2
of the points my meter shows .8 ohms. When I touch the 2 leads of the tester
together I get a .4 reading. Do I subtract .4 from the original reading to get
the true resistance in the compressor? I have 3 different points to to check.
Thanks


Zero the ohm meeter before each test. There should be a knob or
something.

Terry King May 24th 04 12:25 AM

Resistance Question
 
In article ,
says...
On 23 May 2004 22:33:59 GMT, something compelled

(C1gmlm), to say:

My electronic module went bad on my Cold Machine and the shop suggested that I
check the resistance of the compressor. When I check the resistance between 2
of the points my meter shows .8 ohms. When I touch the 2 leads of the tester
together I get a .4 reading. Do I subtract .4 from the original reading to get
the true resistance in the compressor? I have 3 different points to to check.
Thanks


Zero the ohm meeter before each test. There should be a knob or
something.

If your meter does not have a zeroing capability, then yes, subtract the
"shorted" reading.

Another approach for such low resistance tests is to use a large power
resistor to pass a current of 1 to 10 amps thru the circuit to be tested,
using a separate 12V battery. If the current is known, most digital
multimeters will read small voltages much more accurately than small
resistances. Do ohm's law: R=E/I so if the current is 10 amps and the
voltage across the device under test is .05 volts, the resistance is .005
ohms. Practically, about 1 amp is fine for most motor winding tests
unless it's a large starter motor etc. You need to know the actual
current you are 'forcing', usually by having a known series "current
limiting" resistor (perhaps 10 ohms rated at 25 watts or more) and
measuring the voltage across IT to calculate the current.

Make sense, or do you need more??

I do this often to measure relay contact resistances, motor windings,
circuit breaker internal resistance, cabling resistance etc.

--
Regards, Terry King ...In The Woods In Vermont

Capturing Live Music in Sound and Images
http://www.terryking.us

Jürgen Spelter May 24th 04 12:15 PM

Resistance Question
 
Hi Mike,

measuring with an ohmmeter as you`ve done won`t bring any true result,
because the compressor is an electrical motor and has not only resistance.
With your method you should substract the values and you will get .4 ohms as
the motor`s resistance. At 12 V voltage the current of that compressor would
be 30 A. I don`t think, your compressor will have such a high current.

Better check the current of your compressor with an amperemeter. In most
cases current is labeled on motor or compressor. If the current is much
higher than the labeled value, then motor has a problem.

You can`t get the current only from voltage and resistance because every
motor is a generator at same time, that makes it a little bit complicated.

Juergen

"C1gmlm" schrieb im Newsbeitrag
...
My electronic module went bad on my Cold Machine and the shop suggested

that I
check the resistance of the compressor. When I check the resistance

between 2
of the points my meter shows .8 ohms. When I touch the 2 leads of the

tester
together I get a .4 reading. Do I subtract .4 from the original reading to

get
the true resistance in the compressor? I have 3 different points to to

check.
Thanks

Mike




Meindert Sprang May 24th 04 06:34 PM

Resistance Question
 
"Jürgen Spelter" wrote in message
...
Hi Mike,

measuring with an ohmmeter as you`ve done won`t bring any true result,
because the compressor is an electrical motor and has not only resistance.
With your method you should substract the values and you will get .4 ohms

as
the motor`s resistance. At 12 V voltage the current of that compressor

would
be 30 A. I don`t think, your compressor will have such a high current.


On startup, it will. Once the motor runs, it generates back-emf. The
difference voltage between supply and back-emf, divided by the internal
resistance, is the resulting current.

Meindert



Shake-Hull May 27th 04 01:42 AM

Resistance Question
 
Try link this is what is used to check my compressor out
http://www.novakool.com/install/friver2.htm#trouble
"Meindert Sprang" wrote in message
...
"Jürgen Spelter" wrote in message
...
Hi Mike,

measuring with an ohmmeter as you`ve done won`t bring any true result,
because the compressor is an electrical motor and has not only

resistance.
With your method you should substract the values and you will get .4

ohms
as
the motor`s resistance. At 12 V voltage the current of that compressor

would
be 30 A. I don`t think, your compressor will have such a high current.


On startup, it will. Once the motor runs, it generates back-emf. The
difference voltage between supply and back-emf, divided by the internal
resistance, is the resulting current.

Meindert






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