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-   -   Themocouple RF antenna current meters. (https://www.radiobanter.com/boatanchors/116039-themocouple-rf-antenna-current-meters.html)

terryS March 3rd 07 03:46 PM

Themocouple RF antenna current meters.
 
Came across a couple of those RF antenna current meters. Typical they
have a scale up to three of five amps. One is US and other is UK war
surplus.
AIUI the meter movement is driven by a small DC current produced from
the output of the thermocouple.
The thermocouple being heated by the RF current. Looks like the meter
itself is a one or five milliamp movement. Can anyone comment/advise?
Thanks.


K3HVG March 3rd 07 04:37 PM

Themocouple RF antenna current meters.
 
Well, they could be either a self-contained meter; one that one hooks up
directly, inline/series, with the RF current and the other is as you
have described. If the meters are not of the sealed type, you can
remove the movement from the shell and have a look. Try and see if
there's a thermocouple mounted somewhere as an integral part of the
unit. Meters, like on the TCS, BC-191/375, and the ART-13 for example,
are self-contained. They generally all work the same, its just where
the thermocouple is located. That's my observation on the subject.....

terryS wrote:
Came across a couple of those RF antenna current meters. Typical they
have a scale up to three of five amps. One is US and other is UK war
surplus.
AIUI the meter movement is driven by a small DC current produced from
the output of the thermocouple.
The thermocouple being heated by the RF current. Looks like the meter
itself is a one or five milliamp movement. Can anyone comment/advise?
Thanks.



Richard Hall March 3rd 07 06:38 PM

Themocouple RF antenna current meters.
 
The May 1969 issue of Popular Electronics has plans to make a 5 Amp. AC
Ammeter out of a BC-442 meter. It uses 300 ohm twin lead as a 0.1375 ohm
shunt. They show 31" plus 1/2" for connections at each end. I have the
proper meter but never acquired the thermocouple.

K3HVG wrote:
Well, they could be either a self-contained meter; one that one hooks up
directly, inline/series, with the RF current and the other is as you
have described. If the meters are not of the sealed type, you can
remove the movement from the shell and have a look. Try and see if
there's a thermocouple mounted somewhere as an integral part of the
unit. Meters, like on the TCS, BC-191/375, and the ART-13 for example,
are self-contained. They generally all work the same, its just where
the thermocouple is located. That's my observation on the subject.....

terryS wrote:
Came across a couple of those RF antenna current meters. Typical they
have a scale up to three of five amps. One is US and other is UK war
surplus.
AIUI the meter movement is driven by a small DC current produced from
the output of the thermocouple.
The thermocouple being heated by the RF current. Looks like the meter
itself is a one or five milliamp movement. Can anyone comment/advise?
Thanks.



Scott Dorsey March 3rd 07 07:01 PM

Themocouple RF antenna current meters.
 
Richard Hall wrote:
The May 1969 issue of Popular Electronics has plans to make a 5 Amp. AC
Ammeter out of a BC-442 meter. It uses 300 ohm twin lead as a 0.1375 ohm
shunt. They show 31" plus 1/2" for connections at each end. I have the
proper meter but never acquired the thermocouple.


What type is the thermocouple? If it's a Type J or K, I probably have
some junk box stuff.
--scott
--
"C'est un Nagra. C'est suisse, et tres, tres precis."

COLIN LAMB March 3rd 07 07:49 PM

Themocouple RF antenna current meters.
 
You can easily determine if the meter is a remote reading meter or one with
a built in thermocouple. Put a digital ohmmeter on the meter leads. if the
resistance is very low, then the thermocuple is built in. If the resistance
reads tens of ohms or more, it is a simple dc meter that can be used for any
purpose.

I have found that many of the remote reading meters are not calibrated in
actual amps, but are relative reading.

Often the rf ammeters that are self contained contain a bakelite or formica
back to give clearance to the rf.

Colin K7FM



Chris Suslowicz March 4th 07 11:57 AM

Themocouple RF antenna current meters.
 
In article .com,
"terryS" wrote:

Came across a couple of those RF antenna current meters. Typical they
have a scale up to three of five amps. One is US and other is UK war
surplus.
AIUI the meter movement is driven by a small DC current produced from
the output of the thermocouple.
The thermocouple being heated by the RF current. Looks like the meter
itself is a one or five milliamp movement. Can anyone comment/advise?
Thanks.


The British ones (black bakelite cases) almost always have the thermocouple
built into the meter. They will usually be marked "Thermocouple" or "For
Radio Frequency Only" on the dial, and the resistance is usually shown
as well.

Be careful: the thermocouple is *VERY* delicate and will not stand up
to overload - the nichrome wire melts and it's useless thereafter.
(I've blown up an ex-Admiralty plug-in meter that was scaled 0-500mA
but had "requires x20 shunt" pencilled very faintly on the back.)

Chris.

--
If it doesn't contravene the Criminal Justice Act (1988) it has no place
in a kitchen. -- Peter Corlett in the scary devil monastery.


terryS March 5th 07 02:42 AM

Themocouple RF antenna current meters.
 
On Mar 4, 8:57 am, (Chris Suslowicz) wrote:
In article .com,

"terryS" wrote:
Came across a couple of those RF antenna current meters. Typical they
have a scale up to three of five amps. One is US and other is UK war
surplus.
AIUI the meter movement is driven by a small DC current produced from
the output of the thermocouple.
The thermocouple being heated by the RF current. Looks like the meter
itself is a one or five milliamp movement. Can anyone comment/advise?
Thanks.


The British ones (black bakelite cases) almost always have the thermocouple
built into the meter. They will usually be marked "Thermocouple" or "For
Radio Frequency Only" on the dial, and the resistance is usually shown
as well.

Be careful: the thermocouple is *VERY* delicate and will not stand up
to overload - the nichrome wire melts and it's useless thereafter.
(I've blown up an ex-Admiralty plug-in meter that was scaled 0-500mA
but had "requires x20 shunt" pencilled very faintly on the back.)

Chris.

Thanks Chris and others. Part of what I was wondering is a seemingly
'dud' RF ammeter. The movement might be OK and could be, say, 1 or 5
milliamp etc. fsd.


Richard Hall March 5th 07 08:54 PM

Themocouple RF antenna current meters.
 
Somebody recently said they might have a suitable thermocouple in their
junk box and asked which type the meter used. The article, in the May
1969 issue of Popular Electronics, doesn't say.

Here's the article:
http://206.124.141.169/albums/acammeter/index.htm


Chris Suslowicz March 5th 07 09:26 PM

Themocouple RF antenna current meters.
 
In article .com,
"terryS" wrote:

Thanks Chris and others. Part of what I was wondering is a seemingly
'dud' RF ammeter. The movement might be OK and could be, say, 1 or 5
milliamp etc. fsd.


Ah, right. In that case:

The ex-RAF meters (marked A (crown) M for Air Ministry) have the resistance
wire soldered directly to the back of the terminals on the case. The
thermocouple is then spotwelded to the middle of the resistance wire,
and one lead goes to one side of the movement directly, the other goes
via a "coil spring" of nichrome resistance wire (length cut to get the
thermocouple calibration correct) to the other side of the movement.

If it's open circuit across the terminals, then the resistance element
has blown. The thermocouple and movement should still be perfectly OK.

(I've considered trying to replace the resistance wire but calibrating
it will be the difficult part.)

Somewhere I have a box of dead meters....

I may be some time.

Chris.

--
Most uses of "spider" have noninsect meanings. -- Christine Malcom-Dept.

wb5kcm March 6th 07 02:46 PM

Themocouple RF antenna current meters.
 
On Mar 5, 3:26 pm, (Chris Suslowicz) wrote:
In article .com,

"terryS" wrote:
Thanks Chris and others. Part of what I was wondering is a seemingly
'dud' RF ammeter. The movement might be OK and could be, say, 1 or 5
milliamp etc. fsd.


Ah, right. In that case:

The ex-RAF meters (marked A (crown) M for Air Ministry) have the resistance
wire soldered directly to the back of the terminals on the case. The
thermocouple is then spotwelded to the middle of the resistance wire,
and one lead goes to one side of the movement directly, the other goes
via a "coil spring" of nichrome resistance wire (length cut to get the
thermocouple calibration correct) to the other side of the movement.

If it's open circuit across the terminals, then the resistance element
has blown. The thermocouple and movement should still be perfectly OK.

(I've considered trying to replace the resistance wire but calibrating
it will be the difficult part.)

Somewhere I have a box of dead meters....

I may be some time.

Chris.

--
Most uses of "spider" have noninsect meanings. -- Christine Malcom-Dept.


Back in the old marine electronics days we had those 410 to 512 Kcs MF
transmitters. They were all required to have built in RF Ammeters. The
transmitters had to meet minimum SOLAS radiation requirements by
multiplying the RF current by the antenna height above the deepest
water line. Usually they were 15 amps or 5 amps fsd (15 for the main
tx and 5 for the emergency tx). These meters were pretty accurate on
mf but some of the transmitters used them on hf also. On hf they were
only accurate depending on the length of antenna/frequency, where the
current node is. We are talking a single wire type feeder. At mf the
current is pretty much the same anywhere on the antenna due to the
long wavelength. I still see some of these meters being sold at
hamfests. Virtually every RF Ammeter used had a built-in shunt. Randy,
wb5kcm



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