Home |
Search |
Today's Posts |
#15
![]()
posted to rec.boats
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
On Mon, 18 Aug 2008 10:58:21 -0700, "Calif Bill"
wrote: Years ago while I was still in college and fixing mainframes to pay for college, the factory engineers came out to a Beta site we had in San Francisco area. Simpson meter is connected across the legs of a 208 3 phase line to see how much voltage was really there. They had the meter on milliamp scale and sounded like a 38 going off in the room. Magic smoke curling up from the meter. except for the milliamp scale, meter worked fine. Had blown apart the shunt resister was all. Good meter. My last simpson died a sad death. Battery leaked and the acid wiped out most of the internals. The Fluke has a 1 amp fuse for the milliamp scale, and a 10 amp one for the amp scale. Actually it is the lead car type batteries that have the acid. Dry cells have zinc chloride which is not an acid, but which is highly corrosive, as you noticed. Alkaline cells do not have acid, obviously. They have potassium hydroxide, and while they are not particularly prone to leakage, the stuff is also highly corrosive. Casady |
Thread Tools | Search this Thread |
Display Modes | |
|
|
![]() |
||||
Thread | Forum | |||
What guage wire?? | General | |||
What guage wire?? | Boat Building | |||
bad trim guage | General | |||
Larson trim guage | General | |||
Sunray Temperature Guage | Cruising |