Zibb

Design Idea

Moving-coil meter measures low-level currents

Edited by Brad Thompson

Kevin Bilke, Maxim Integrated Products Inc, Hook Hants, UK -- EDN, 3/3/2005

Although an analog moving-coil meter may lack the resolution and accuracy that a digital readout provides, a meter remains the display of choice for certain applications. A digital readout simply cannot provide information about a measurement's rate of change, and tracking a reading's trend is easier on an analog meter.

Large moving-coil meters may require significant amounts of current for full-scale deflection, and using a shunt resistor may prove impractical when the meter current is larger than the current you are measuring. You can solve the problem by driving the meter from a separate power supply (Figure 1). In this example, an 8-in. moving-coil meter that requires 15 mA for full-scale deflection displays a current range of 0 to 1A dc. This technique can also simplify specifying or fabricating shunt resistors for custom current ranges. Unlike other current-sense amplifiers that derive operating power from the current you are measuring, IC1 provides a separate supply-voltage terminal for its internal circuitry. In operation, IC1's output current, IOUT, equals VSENSE/100V, where VSENSE is the voltage across RSENSE1.

This Design Idea uses IC1 rather than the many current-sense amplifiers available because it provides a separate supply-voltage terminal for the internal circuitry, whereas other devices take power from the current you are measuring. In this application, a full-scale current of 1A develops 1V across RSENSE1, which IC1 converts to a maximum output current of 10 mA that produces a maximum voltage of 1V across R1. Operational amplifier IC2 and transistor Q1 form a voltage-controlled current sink that draws current through meter M1. A full-scale reading of 15 mA develops 1V across 66Ω resistor RSENSE2. You can adjust the resistor's value to calibrate the meter or to alter the full-scale current range.

This circuit also allows separation of the measurement point and meter location. Moving-coil meters are not intended for applications that require precision measurement, and you can use relaxed-accuracy passive components. Bypass the instrument-supply voltage with decoupling capacitors that the electrical-noise environment requires.

 

Check out our Best of Design Ideas section!



Reed Business Information Resource Center

Featured Company


Related Resources

ADVERTISEMENT

ADVERTISEMENT

Feedback Loop


Post a CommentPost a Comment

There are no comments posted for this article.

Related Content

 

By This Author

There are no additional articles written by this author.


ADVERTISEMENT

Knowledge Center



Technology Quick Links

EDN Marketplace


©1997-2009 Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.
Use of this Web site is subject to its Terms of Use | Privacy Policy

Please visit these other Reed Business sites