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6100A/6101A - Alternative verification methods
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1. Measure phase angle with the current settings shown in Table 5 Voltage Range 168V Voltage setting 120V Frequency 60Hz V to reference Reversed en Ilc Low High High Low EEE ae ge Setting Flicker Flicker Flicker Flicker perat Shunt value value value value POTT 0 28V 0 2V 0 003 1 5V 1 2V 0 003 z 10V 8v 0 003 200mA 0 25A 0 2A 0 003 s00mA 0 5A 0 4A 0 003 1A 1A 0 8A 0 003 2A 2A 1 6A 0 003 BA BA 4A 0 004 10A 10A BA 0 004 20A 21A 16A 0 004 EL9830 80A 50A 0 004 Table 5 Phase measurements to single voltage range In Table 6 it is assumed the 2A range is chosen for comparison with each voltage range Current Range 2A Current setting 1 6A Frequency 60Hz V to reference Reversed 40 Voltage Low kage High Low Calculated specification Smm Range Sotta ae ae ae vais emor fm rrequency lt 70Hz 2A 16V 0 2V 0 003 2A 33V 1 2V 0 003 2A 78V 8V 0 003 2A 168V 0 2A 0 003 2A 336V 0 4A 0 003 2A 1008V 0 8A 0 003 Table 6 Phase measurements to single current range Phase angle can be verified at other frequencies by choosing the same appropriate harmonic for voltage and current The voltage and current channels should be set to Harmonic mode user manual section 4 22 Set up the required harmonic bearing in mind the amp
2. The 6100A voltage output should be applied to the power meter reference input except when performing the input reversal method to reduce uncertainty Implications of the 6100A design Phase angle verification measurements are simplified by the 6100A design approach Voltage and current channel phase angles are adjusted to have zero error with respect to a common internal phase reference signal It is therefore not necessary to measure the phase angle between every voltage and current range combination Further more as the design ensures there is no variation in phase accuracy with setting measurements can be made at whatever phase angle is deemed most appropriate 6100A initial set up Phase measurement requires both the voltage and current channels to be Enabled together User manual section 4 17 describes how channels are enabled and how to switch between editing voltage and current output parameters Set both voltage and current channels to Sine mode user manual section 4 22 The recommended verification scheme involves measuring each current range against a single voltage range then each voltage range against a single current range These measurements should be repeated at each frequency of interest This reduces the number of measurements required at each frequency from 66 to 17 Select an appropriate voltage range on the 6100A and set the output as required e g Table 5 assumes that 120V 60Hz is used as the reference voltage
3. 6000 200 H100 85 4 Table 1 Recommended voltage verification points 6100A 6101A Alternative verification methods Current amplitude verification Current amplitude verification The A40 and 440 shunts are specified by their AC DC amplitude errors at various frequencies They are not design to be used for absolute measurements of AC currents To achieve the required accuracy use the AC DC transfer current measurement technique described in chapter 4 section 4 25 of the 5790A user manual Note that the combined specification is valid from 50 and 100 of the shunt value Recommended 6100A current measurement points are set out in Table 2 below Use the shunt most appropriate to the value being measured Where a harmonic number is specified ensure all other harmonics including the fundamental frequency are removed from the output user manual section 4 23 Sine mode 6100A Range ae oacy peer raoi Sr Measured value number 0 25 60 0 1 sine 19 9 60 0 25 sine 38 5 6000 0 05 H100 31 3 0 5 60 0 2 sine 33 8 60 0 5 sine 71 0 6000 0 1 H100 56 5 1 60 0 4 sine 61 6 60 1 0 sine 136 6000 0 2 H100 107 2 60 8 sine 117 60 2 0 sine 266 6000 0 4 H100 208 5 60 2 sine 284 60 5 sine 656 6000 1 H100 511 10 60 4 sine 770 60 10 sine 1646 6000 8 H100 1044 21 60 8 sine 1 7mA 60 20 sine 3 8mA 6000 4 H100 2 7mA 80 60 32 sine 8 5mA 60 80
4. 6100A 6101A Alternative verification methods Alternative verification of 6100A 6101A 6100A 6101A Alternative verification methods Title Page Implications of the 6100A desig 6 100A initial set up Alternative verification of 6100A 6101A The following describes how to verify the performance of your 6100A if the sampling measurement techniques described in Chapter seven of the user manual are not available The same techniques can be used to measure 6101A Auxiliary units but a 6100A is required to control the 6101A Rigorous type testing of the 6100A has shown that when the phase and gain of each voltage or current channel are correctly adjusted all other specifications will be met The gain and phase measurements required can be made using the equipment listed in the following paragraphs All measurements are of sine waves and phase angle measurements are made between the voltage and the current outputs Recommendation Users should be aware that the 6100A is optimized for use with sampling measurement instruments Some RMS sensing meters have AC input bandwidths of many MHz and cannot reject non harmonic components As a result this type of instrument may give misleading results It is recommended that only sampling techniques or those described below are used to verify or adjust the performance of the 6100A Equipment recommended for amplitude measurements Fluke 5790A AC measurement standard Fluke A40 and A40A Current shunt
5. because the inputs to the power meter have been reversed as E34 Egjoo Epy for measurements 3 and 4 Now 1 and 4 gave the same deduced result of 60 005 but the power meter errors were reversed by swapping the inputs Using our pre determined error relationships 60 007 Egioo Epy 599 999 Es1004 Epm 60 007 599 99 2 Epy Epy 0 004 Now substituting for E in 2 and using the value deduced from the flicker technique 60 004 60 006 Egjo9 0 004 Es1004 60 004 60 006 0 004 0 002 That is the 6100A error at its 60 000 degrees setting has been measured to be 0 002 The example above assumes a unique power meter value displayed for every 6100A setting but instrument short term stability and noise will almost certainly make the results appear more random The most reliable way to employ the flicker point technique is with automated measurements where every reading can be captured and used in a statistical evaluation Nevertheless it is not unreasonable to assign an uncertainty due to meter resolution of 0 002 when the flicker point technique is manually applied by an experienced operator The effect of shunt bandwidth must be combined with the resolution error in order to properly estimate systematic phase angle error 6100A 6101A Alternative verification methods Phase angle verification Phase angle verification In the 6100A current phase angle is specified with voltage as the reference
6. d current to Absolute RMS user manual section 4 8 Set the 6100A voltage terminal configuration to 4 wire user manual section 4 11 If the Direct Mode key on the front panel is not illuminated press the key to select Direct Mode user manual section 4 13 Select voltage or current as required and Enable the channel as described in user manual section 4 17 For safety and to avoid overload error reports Disable voltage while measuring current and vice versa Note that a channel must be enabled and the OPER key pressed before voltage or current appears at the output terminals Voltage amplitude verification Voltage measurements should be made with the 6100A connected via the special 4 wire sense lead provided connected to the 5790A Input 2 binding posts Recommended voltage measurement points are set out in Table 1 below Where a harmonic number is specified ensure all other harmonics including the fundamental frequency are removed from the output user manual section 4 23 anat ER Sine mode 6100A RANGE hz S falta nie Ha ian Measured value number 16 60 6 sine 1 7 60 16 sine 2 8 6000 3 H100 2 5 33 60 13 sine 3 6 60 33 sine 5 2 6000 6 H100 5 1 78 60 31 sine 5 8 60 78 sine 10 7 6000 15 H100 9 7 168 60 67 sine 12 6 60 168 sine 23 2 6000 33 H100 21 3 336 60 134 sine 25 1 60 336 sine 46 4 6000 66 H100 46 8 100 60 330 sine 80 8 8 60 1000 sine 184 0
7. e measurements using the 1008V range can be adequately performed with output settings less than 350V Phase angle measurement limitations current The Clark Hess model 6000 phase meter minimum input is 10mV The output of the A40 and A40A shunts is typically 500mV at full rated input current Best phase measurement results will be achieved when shunts are used at 20 of the rated current value or above Phase meter resolution limitations At first glance the specification of the Clark Hess model 6000 phase meter is not appropriate for measurement of the 6100A Two techniques can be employed to improve this situation significantly At lower frequencies the 6100A 1 year specification is 3m The best resolution of the Clark Hess model 6000 phase meter is 10 m When you add in the bandwidth error of the current shunts the performance of the measurement system is more than 4 times worse than the 6100A specification The effect of measurement system errors can be reduced however Say the phase meter displays 60 01 Because the reported phase angle is rounded it could be any value between 60 005 and 60 014 and that represents an uncertainty of 0 005 due to display resolution Higher effective resolution can be artificially achieved by using the 6100A setting resolution of 1m to seek out the flicker point between two values on the Clarke Hess phase angle display For example if the phase meter display can be made to flick between sa
8. litude limitation for harmonics see user manual section 1 8 For harmonic frequencies lt 2850Hz amplitudes up to 30 of range may be set The maximum amplitude allowed decreases with frequency to 20 at 6kHz Set voltage and current 1 harmonic amplitude to zero to remove the fundamental frequencies from the outputs See user manual section 1 28 for phase angle accuracy specification of signals gt 69Hz or where either the voltage or current output is less than 40 of range 10
9. s using current shunts The Fluke A40 and A40A shunts typically have bandwidth in excess of 1MHz This makes their errors of the same order but generally less than the 6100A phase angle specifications If other shunts are used it is important their bandwidth is known The effect of shunt bandwidth is discussed below Effects of bandwidth on phase angle measurements The accuracy of phase angle measurements may be significantly affected by errors due to the bandwidth of the measuring system If the measurement system bandwidth exhibits a single pole roll off equation 1 can be used to estimate the phase error due to bandwidth E phase aretan 1 fb w where fis the frequency of the measurement and fbw is the bandwidth of the measurement system Table 4 provides estimated phase angle errors for various frequencies at different bandwidths 6100A 6101A Alternative verification methods Phase angle measurement fundamentals Bandwidth Hz 10kHz 100kHz 1MHz 10MHz Signal frequency 60Hz 344m 34m 3 4m 0 3m 600Hz 3 4 344m 34m 3 4m 6kHz 31 3 4 344m 34m Table 4 Effect of system bandwidth Phase angle measurement limitations voltage The Clark Hess model 6000 phase meter is recommended because its maximum voltage input is 350V and extemal attenuators are not required Nevertheless care should be taken not to exceed this limit when the 6100A 1008V range is selected The phase angl
10. set characterized with a Fluke 792A 700A adapter The Fluke 5790A 7001 adapter cable for use with the A40A shunts Precision DC current source such as 5520A for use in AC DC transfer current measurements The four wire sensing voltage connector lead provided with the 6100A The current connector lead provided with the 6100A For 6100A 80A only Measure Tech Precision Measurements EL 980 AC current shunt set Equipment recommended for phase measurements Clarke Hess Model 6000 Phase meter Fluke A40 and A40A Current shunt set characterized with a Fluke 792A 700A adapter The Fluke 5790A 7001 adapter cable for use with the A40A shunts Dual 4mm banana to BNC adapter N type Male to BNC adapter The four wire sensing voltage connector lead provided with the 6100A The current connector lead provided with the 6100A Measurement tolerances In the processes that follow measurement system accuracy may be significant against the 6100A specification As an example when measuring current the combined specification of the 5790A and the A40 A40A shunts is about the same as the 6100A So how do you know if the 6100A meets its specification In some cases you cannot tell A simple way to categorize results is to calculate two tolerances for each measurement A Pass tolerance is derived by subtracting the measurement system accuracy figure from the 6100A 2s 6100A 6101A Alternative verification methods Amplitude measurements specifica
11. sine 20mA 3000 16 H50 1lmA Table 2 Recommended current verification points B Voltage from current terminals amplitude verification Recommended voltage from current terminal measurement points are set out in Table 3 below Where a harmonic number is specified ensure all other harmonics including the fundamental frequency are removed from the output user manual section 4 23 __ Sine mode 6100A hae a ord rarer iain ia specification Measured value number pV 0 25 60 0 1 sine 50 60 0 25 sine 80 6000 0 05 H100 80 1 5 60 13 sine 170 60 33 sine 340 6000 6 H100 350 10 60 31 sine 1100 60 78 sine 2240 6000 15 H100 3000 Table 3 Recommended voltage from current terminal verification points Phase angle measurement fundamentals The phase angle between voltage and current components at the same frequency is important for power calculations The following procedure allows the phase angle between voltage and current outputs at the same frequency to be measured Where the wave shape of voltage or current signals is important the phase angle of harmonics relative to their fundamental frequency must be known The instruments recommended in this procedure cannot provide that information See the chapter 7 of the user manual for details of the sampling method used at Fluke Service Centers To compare current and voltage phase angles the current signals must be converted to voltage
12. tion The second a Fail tolerance figure comes from the addition of the two numbers Then there are three possible outcomes from the measurement If the measured error is more than the Fail tolerance the 6100A definitely does not meet its specification If the measured error is less than the Pass tolerance the 6100A definitely meets its specification If the result is between the Fail and Pass tolerance you cannot tell The result is said to be indeterminate The larger the measurement system tolerance the wider the indeterminate band If the measurement system tolerance is greater than the 6100A specification the definitely passes result cannot exist that is you cannot say the result shows that the 6100A definitely passes In the extreme the measurement may only be capable of showing whether or not a gross error exists unless something is done to improve the measurement This would be the case with phase angle measurement if the measures describe in the Phase meter resolution limitations were not implemented Amplitude measurements 5790A initial set up There are no special set up conditions for the 5790A and it should be left in its power up configuration including auto ranging See table 4 1 in chapter 4 of the 5790A user manual for details of power up settings 6100A initial set up Read Chapter 3 of the user manual for an overview of 61004 front panel operation On the 6100A set the harmonic edit mode for voltage an
13. y 60 01 and 60 02 by changing the 6100A setting by 0 001 the measured value could be considered to be 060 014 for the lower 6100A setting and 060 015 for the higher Now the resolution of the phase meter is effectively 0 001 In the second technique the errors between the two phase meter input channels are reduced by making measurements before and after swapping the voltage and current signals at the phase meter inputs This second technique should be employed at each frequency at which measurements are made Note that neither of the methods described remove the effect of shunt bandwidth Consider the following example the 6100a voltage output is connected to the phase meter reference channel the output of the current shunts to the input channel Measurement 6100A output Phase meter Value deduced from number setting reading Flicker technique 60 000 60 00 1 60 007 60 01 60 005 2 60 006 60 00 60 004 Now we swap the inputs so that current is the reference voltage is connected to the input channel Measurement 6100A output Phase meter Value deduced from number setting reading Flicker technique 60 000 60 01 3 59 998 60 00 60 004 4 59 999 60 01 60 005 To analyze the results Let Egioo De the 6100A error which is to be determined Let Epy be the phase meter error at this frequency due to input channel differences Let us define the measurement error as E12 Es1004 Epy for measurements 1 and 2 and
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