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DIY Arduino Esr Meter Shield – Part 1: Intro & Demo

On June 25, 2013, in Arduino, Projects, by Dennis Hill

After using the analog ESR meter I built, I soon discovered I needed a meter with just a bit more resolution to read the low ESR cap values (less than 1 ohm). Sure the analog meter worked flawlessly for troubleshooting BAD caps, but when testing caps for use in low ESR SMPS circuits, it left a lot to be desired.

So I set out to find a micro controller circuit driving an LCD and what I was able to find was either incomplete or way to complicated. So I decided to take Manfred Morninweg’s design that I modded for the analog meter and somehow use it with an Arduino.

This is part 1 of the Arduino ESR Shield I designed.

Part 2 can be seen here. Part 3 can be seen here. Part 4 can be seen here.

In this video I go over the background of the design, I then demo the operation and functions of the meter and go over future video segments I am doing to explain how it works and how to make one yourself.

Watch in HD!

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DIY Analog ESR Meter

On June 25, 2013, in Projects, by Dennis Hill

I got busy a while ago and built a version of an ESR meter designed by Manfred Mornhinweg. Here is a link to the ESR page.

This is actually the second version of his design I have built and this time I built the meter inside a cheap analog volt/ohm meter. This was the cheapest option as the cost of a generic panel mount analog meter alone surpassed the cost of the cheap Gardner Bender GMT-318 volt/ohm meter I built it in.

Here is a PDF of the original design.

Here is a PDF of my mods.

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