• We’re currently investigating an issue related to the forum theme and styling that is impacting page layout and visual formatting. The problem has been identified, and we are actively working on a resolution. There is no impact to user data or functionality, this is strictly a front-end display issue. We’ll post an update once the fix has been deployed. Thanks for your patience while we get this sorted.

Why would a test point be showing V instead of mV?

aphex

Moderator<br>All Things Apple
Moderator
Something seems to be amiss here. My auto ranging multimeter is reporting back 20V on a test spot that should be 20mV.

?
 
Either your meter is wrong, or there really is 1000 times more voltage than should exist. Pick one. Use a different meter to test your hypothesis.
 
Originally posted by: MrPickins
I'd run to walmart and buy a $5 DMM to get a second opinion on the voltage.

I have a $5 one from Harbor Freight. Set to DCV 200 its showing 20

Is that mV or V? (This meter doesn't show)

EDIT: From what I can tell, thats showing V as well. It would need to be in 2000m or 200m to show mV, which both show OL 🙁
 
Originally posted by: aphex
Originally posted by: MrPickins
I'd run to walmart and buy a $5 DMM to get a second opinion on the voltage.

I have a $5 one from Harbor Freight. Set to DCV 200 its showing 20

Is that mV or V? (This meter doesn't show)

20V

DCV200 means max is 200V

You got a short somewhere is what I can think of.
 
Originally posted by: sdifox
Originally posted by: aphex
Originally posted by: MrPickins
I'd run to walmart and buy a $5 DMM to get a second opinion on the voltage.

I have a $5 one from Harbor Freight. Set to DCV 200 its showing 20

Is that mV or V? (This meter doesn't show)

20V

DCV200 means max is 200V

You got a short somewhere is what I can think of.

This.
 
check for a missing ground connection somewhere. I'm guessing that 20v is your supply voltage. if you have a broken ground connection, it could very well be pulled to the supply voltage.
 
Originally posted by: cirthix
check for a missing ground connection somewhere. I'm guessing that 20v is your supply voltage. if you have a broken ground connection, it could very well be pulled to the supply voltage.

Yeah. I'd trust two meters over what my instinct says it "should" be.
 
Back
Top