Thanks for all the suggestions.

The Fluke 8050A schematic is hard to follow due to the complicated range and 
function switching, but if I did so correctly, on the 20M ohm and 2M ohm ranges 
it applies 1.2 volts through a precision 10.00M ohms reference resistance, then 
through about 2K ohms, then to the resistor under test. It measures the voltage 
across the resistance reference and then the resistor under test and reports 
their ratio. The 8050A has a conductance function as well as resistance, but 
the actual measurement circuit is identical to the resistance function; the 
dual-slope conversion is simply inverted.

For the 6.837M ohm resistor I measured, the voltage on the resistor under test 
would be about 0.5 volts, so I can't see thermoelectric effects being an 
explanation.

For the 683.7K ohm resistor, the voltage would be about 77 mV, so I could see 
the need to start to worry about thermoelectric effects, but the change in 
resistance for the smaller resistor is lower, so I think it must be some other 
effect.

I have a 2.00M ohm 1% wire-wound resistance standard in a nice oak box that I 
obtained from the recent MIT lab storeroom clean-out. I've yet to clean up the 
terminals, but measurements of it seem to exhibit similar polarity sensitivity, 
so I now think the cause must be in my measurement technique or in the meter 
itself. The 8050A reads about 10 µV DC across the resistance, so that seems 
like a thermoelectric effect, but one too small to affect the resistance 
measurement. The kicker is that the 8050A reads about 0.4 volts AC across the 
resistance, and it is only spec'd at ">60 dB" normal-mode rejection ratio for 
60 Hz.

I tried twisting the test probe leads together, but I still get about 0.4 volts 
AC. I plan to try using coax next, with short leads to the test clips, and see 
if I can get the AC level down. I should also try moving the meter somewhere 
further away from the service entrance to my house; my workbench is only about 
5 feet away from it.

Best regards,
-Steve

-- 
Steve Byan <[email protected]>
Littleton, MA 01460



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