On Sat, 23 Jan 2016, Mattis Lind wrote:
2016-01-23 13:54 GMT+01:00 Noel Chiappa <j...@mercury.lcs.mit.edu>:

If you do a lot of work with analog components (and it sounds like you do), it's probably worth getting capacitance and ESR meters, they can be obtained (new) on eBay for not that much. I have one of each that I got that way; their quality is pretty good, considering how little I paid for them (I didn't think I'd be using them enough to make it worth paying out a lot for really good ones). I haven't used the ESR meter much, but the capacitance meter works quite well, and has been very helpful. Of course, it can't be used in-circuit, but...

Yes. agree with you.I really should get one. I have been thinking I need to get one every time I get my head into anther PSU and then everything is sorted out and the PSU seems to work fine and I forget about it. I have been looking at the DerEE DE-5000 which looks nice and has got good reviews as far as I can tell. What meter do you have and recommend?

The one I absolutely cannot in good faith recommend (unless you are going to custom build it) is one that seems to come up in these discussions the most, and that is the Blue ESR from Anatek. The design itself isn't that bad, however Anatek used some of the worst junk-sourced parts I have ever seen when they kitted up the one I bought. I used the pre-programmed micro, the led displays, and most of the fixed value resistors, but junked most of the rest of the components they included and used my own. The trimmer resistors they included didn't even fit the pad layout of the board. The wire they included to make the "test leads" was also really bad quality and was wadded up and kinked. I fitted some shrouded banana jacks to my tester instead of the short hard wired leads.

Another thing to keep in mind with the Blue ESR is that the firmware has a limitation and cannot measure small value capacitors (under 0.1uF?) and it also only goes down to 0.01 ohms.

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