What's this thing do?
https://dl.dropboxusercontent.com/u/...y%20bridge.jpg
Simpson Capacity Bridge 381. Guess where I got it. Can I... measure the capacitance of capacitors with it? O_o I mean, that's kind of what it looks like. Can't really find any info on these. |
Yes. Here's an article:
http://www.rfcafe.com/references/qst...l-1944-qst.htm I never used one, but I believe this one needs an external signal generator, indicated by "1000~" in the article. |
'tis from 1950 - here's some "new product" listings..
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Works a lot like my Heathkit C3...Only swap a meter for the eye, remove resistance and leakage testing.
Might be able to mod that to be a RLC bridge with some engineering work... |
oops - didn't realize the power cord was attached, so now guessing this has an internal oscillator, so nothing more is needed.
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Thanks for the help guys!
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It's hard to believe it could operate at 60 Hz for small capacitors, especially the mmf scale.
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By the way, do you notice the meter movement is mounted upside down? That's because the instruction to tune for "maximum" is really tuning for a minimum.
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jr |
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Reactance of 10mmf (10pf) at 60 Hz = 265 Megohm Maximum current at 55 volts is 0.2 microamps Reactance goes down to 16 Megohm at 1 Khz, still a pretty big number |
Just for grins, I just measured the smallest cap that I could find in my (junk) assortment that had leads... (7.7 uuf according to my DE-5000)... the old Heathkit C-3 produced a sharp null on the eye tube at slightly below 10 uuf, so I believe that this bridge circuit is indeed capable of measuring small values of C using a 60 Hz source. :scratch2:
jr |
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My low range works somewhere below 100pF (lowest cap I recall trying), but I did recap my unit with precise value caps.
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But these old units IMO are invaluable for the leakage function at rated voltage. Simply nobody today makes anything that does this EXCEPT Sencore to my knowledge. Ebay has a couple of those modern units right now. An LC102 for a grand or two and even the old Z Meter LC75s from a suspect the 70s are usually a few hundred. So the old Heathkits are to me definitely the way to go hands down. Simple in construction, yet durable enough, and they get the job done well with the added attraction of vintage looks and a magic eye. Some don't like the magic eye and want a milliammeter. Indeed more accurate, so you step up to a Sprague TelOhmike, but they are much more complex. There is a Pyramid model that is like a C3 only with a milliammeter. That's what I want!:thmbsp: Oh and never change out you magic eye tube unless it gets dim or shorts. |
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jr |
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