Hi Charles,
I have a couple of Fluke and HP null voltmeters. One of the Flukes has a FET 
chopper board in it. It was apparently fitted as part of a repair by Fluke, but 
I have no data on it. The HP 419 battery packs contain standard sized cells and 
can be recelled. There are 20 of them so it gets expensive. An alternative is 
to replace them with a shunt regulator (2 x12Vzener diode) and use mains only. 
You need the shunt to generate a virtual earth that is provided by the battery 
center tap in the original design.


Robert G8RPI.




________________________________
 From: Charles P. Steinmetz <[email protected]>
To: Discussion of precise voltage measurement <[email protected]> 
Sent: Saturday, 15 December 2012, 10:28
Subject: Re: [volt-nuts] Fluke 335A versus HP 740B
 
David wrote:

> I have a Keithley 155 Null Detector how does that rate?

The three usual suspects are the Fluke 845AB, the HP 419A, and Keithley 155.  I 
have one of each, and they are all good meters.  The received wisdom is that 
the Fluke is the one to have.  However, in my view, the Keithley is the best of 
the bunch.  It is a bonus if you find one with the rare 1554 AC power module 
(the 1554 mounts to the rear panel and allows AC operation -- otherwise, it is 
battery-only).

The main problem today with the HP is that it uses impossible-to-find 
batteries.  Not only are the original batteries unobtainable, I have yet to 
find a satisfactory replacement strategy.  It also does not have a +/- 1 uV 
range, although I do not count that as a major fault since thermocouple noise 
in the measurement setup frequently prevents taking full advantage of the 1 uV 
range.

The Fluke's batteries (sub-C NiCd cells) are readily replaced (though not 
inexpensively, if you get the best cells).  Keithley used four, # 246 9 V 
carbon cells, which can easily be replaced with common 9 V alkalines or 9 V 
primary lithium cells that simply plug into the existing connectors.

The HP and Fluke both use photocell choppers.  Fluke published pre-release 
information indicating that they had designed a FET chopper for later 
production, but I have never seen an 845 with a FET chopper or a schematic of 
the FET chopper.  (Does anyone here have either?)  The Keithley was designed 
with a MOSFET chopper from the start.

Not only is the Keithley the most modern design and the most likely to remain 
reliable, it also performs the best in my lab.  I have had fewer ground loop 
and shielding problems with it than with the Fluke, and it has less noise and 
less drift.  It is not enough better that most people should sell their Fluke 
to get a Keithley just for the performance difference (reliability may be 
another story), but -- IME -- it does perform better.

They are all good meters, but IMO the Keithley is the best of the three.  If I 
had only one, that is the one I'd want.

Best regards,

Charles









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