105
Crest Factor Errors (non-sinusoidal inputs)
A common misconception is that "since an AC Multimeter is a true RMS, its
sine wave accuracy specifications apply to all waveforms." The shape of the
input signal can dramatically affect measurement accuracy. A common way to
describe signal wave shapes is “crest factor”. Crest factor is the ratio of the
peak value to RMS value of a waveform.
The greater the crest factor, the greater the energy contained in high
frequency harmonics. All Multimeters have errors that are crest factor
dependent. (The crest factor errors do not apply for input signals below
100Hz.)
You can estimate the measurement error due to signal crest factor as shown
below:
Total Error
=
Error (Sine wave) + Error (Crest factor) + Error
(Bandwidth)
Error (Sine wave): error for sine wave
Error (Crest factor): crest factor additional error.
Error (Bandwidth): estimated bandwidth error as shown below:
C.F.:
signal crest factor
F:
fundamental frequency of pulse
BW:
effective bandwidth of the Multimeter
Example:
Calculate the approximate measurement error for a pulse train input with a
crest factor of 2 and a fundamental frequency of 20 kHz. For this example,
assume 1-year accuracy specifications of the Multimeter: ± (0.05%× r
0.03%× range).
Total Error = (0.05%× 0.03%× range) + (0.05%× range) +
(0.8%× reading)
= 0.85%× r 0.08%× range
Summary of Contents for T3DMM6-5
Page 1: ...User Manual T3DMM6 5 Digital Multimeter T3DMM6 5 SC Digital Multimeter ...
Page 18: ...17 Appearance and Size Diagram 1 4 Appearance and Size ...
Page 26: ...25 User Interface Diagram 1 9 User Interface Measurement Measurement ...
Page 29: ...28 Temperature Measurement For RTD and thermcouple sensors ...