How To Use A Voltmeter To Solve All Most Of Your Home Appliance Woes.
Measuring Circuit Voltage
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Plug the probes into the meter. Red goes to the positive (+) and black to the negative (-). -
Turn the selector dial or switch to the type of measurement you want. To measure alternating current, such as a wall outlet, (home appliances) use ACV or V~. To measure direct current, a battery for example - use DCV or V-.
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Choose the range setting. The dial may have options from 10 to 1000 on the ACV side, and 5 to
1000 on the DCV side. The setting should be the top end of the voltage you are reading. For example the setting should be higher than 120 for a 120V wall outlet. (If the meter is set at to low of a measurement scale the meter’s internal fuse may burn out)
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Hold the probes by the insulated handles and touch the red probe to the positive side of a DC circuit or either side of an AC circuit. Touch the other side with the black probe.
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Read the digital display or analog dial for voltage measurement.
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Measuring Circuit Resistance
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Select a setting within the Ω (ohms) section on the meter dial. (Ohm's Law)
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Setting options are usually between 200 2000k (thousand)
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Using higher range settings will increase the meters sensitivity to resistances.
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Touch the positive (red) and negative (black) probes together, the reading you receive is a closed circuit (power can flow with 0 resistance.)
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