I've heard that some Univolts have a brass bar for that purpose in series with the loads. It might be identifiable by having a slot for moving the tap to adjust the calibration. To predict a shunt one needs to know the millivolt drop of the indicator. Then a length of wire can be predicted. I would prefer to not add wire for that especially if there's already the brass bar in the Univolt because at 12 volts intentionally wasting a quarter volt in wire is wasting too large a fraction of what is available from the Univolt or battery. The standard electrical meters for use with shunts are 50 millivolts full scale, though some are 100 millivolts and some are more odd. To unsubscribe or to change to a daily Digest, please go to http://www.airstream.net/vaclist/listoffice.html If replying back to this message, please delete all the unnecessary original text from your reply.
[VAC] Re: Control Panel Ammeter
Dr. Gerald N. Johnson, electrical engineer Sun, 25 Mar 2001 20:38:30 -0800
- [VAC] Re: Control Panel Ammeter Weimers
- [VAC] Re: Control Panel Am... D Welch
- [VAC] Re: Control Panel Am... Weimers
- Dr. Gerald N. Johnson, electrical engineer
