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Calibration Routine for Craftsman Multimeter

mbruffey

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Joined
May 8, 2011
Messages
60
Anyone have a calibration routine for a Craftsman 982408 / 82408 multimeter (or similar)? I can't seem to discover the MFG. It has 3 calibration points, so far as I can tell. A blue-colored VR1 near the LCD, then a VR2 and 3 elsewhere on the board. I've had this thing since the early 1990s, or maybe even late 80s (as best I can recall). Normally, I would not bother with calibration on a thing of this type, but it thinks I have 147v on the mains!! Its battery reads 9v; appears good. Thanks!
 
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mbruffey

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May 8, 2011
Messages
60
I noticed some very pretty blue dust under C4 and C6 on the motherboard of this little gem. I thought, "Maybe red will work better than black!" Sure enough!
 

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Citation

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Jan 20, 2016
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Indy
Looks good. Properly calibrating the meter is likely going to cost more in service fees or equipment than the meter is worth. I have seen people selling a test board that has a precision voltage source and precision resistors plus the tested values of those items. I think some of the multimeter review guys on Youtube were using them. Testing against a known good meter is OK. However, if changing the caps seems to have put the meter back in spec, so much the better. It's possible those parts aren't part of the precision measurement chain in the meter. Given they were electrolytics, it's quite likely.
 
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bwringer

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Jan 1, 2013
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10,253
Location
Indianapolis
Nicely done! It took me a minute to work out what you did there.



My office is located in one of the oldest parts of the city, and the power at our outlets tends to be very dirty and highly variable. We keep all our computer equipment on better UPS units mainly to filter the outages, noise, blinks, sags, brownouts, and surges, and keep the voltage steady. We get about four years out of most UPS units.

Anyway, the first time I "sanity checked" a meter with an outlet before using it for something else, I thought I was going crazy. I've seen anywhere from 109VAC to 129VAC at our outlets. It's slowly gotten a little better as the power company has updated and replaced ancient infrastructure. On the plus side, we have fiber internet to our building, so that's been mighty nice...
 
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dnschmidt

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Joined
Oct 3, 2014
Messages
7,270
Location
Phoenix, AZ
Capacitors are the most common failure points. Probably the least robust of all electronic components including semiconductors. Always wise to check the caps. Luckily they often signal, as yours did, that they're bad by leaking. Sure makes troubleshooting easier.
 
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