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Digital Multimeter range question

RichTes

Well-known member
Joined
Sep 18, 2013
Messages
54
Why does an auto ranging digital multimeter have ranges? What's the point?

I can see on an analog meter knowing which band the result is on, but for an auto ranging digital meter if it shows 120.0 why do I care that it might be in a 0-600v range versus showing OL in a 0-60.

Thanks.
 
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johnre

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Joined
Dec 1, 2016
Messages
1,055
Location
Portland, OR
Ultimately, the measured parameter ends up at a finite resolution A/D converter. It's best to use as close to the full range of the A/D input as possible, in order to optimize for the resolved level of detail that @Cruzan80 spoke of above. So that means designing it with several ranges, often in a half-decade logarithmic arrangement of 3 / 10 / 30 / 100 etc.

The analogy you used of an analog meter is actually a pretty good one here; you wouldn't use an analog meter over only the bottom 5% of the needle's arc for the same reason you wouldn't do this with and A/D converter - ability to resolve small readings.

And this all has nothing to do with whether the DVM is manual or autoranging - it's the same problem regardless.
 
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fitter30

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Joined
Jun 23, 2019
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2,986
Location
Peace Valley,mo
One is just checking voltage to see if its hot another if your trying to set to something up and want to be as close as possible.
 
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