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Page Title: ELECTRODYNAMIC METER MOVEMENT
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DAMPING
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Neets Module 03-Introduction to Circuit Protection, Control, and Measurement
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MOVING-VANE METER MOVEMENTS

1-13 As the coil moves, the vane moves within the airtight chamber. The action of the vane against the air in the chamber opposes the coil movement and damps the oscillations. Q13.     How can a d’Arsonval meter movement be adapted for use as an ac meter? Q14.     What is damping? Q15.     What are two methods used to damp a meter movement? Q16.     What value does a meter movement react to (actually measure) when measuring ac? Q17.     What value is indicated on the scale of an ac meter? An additional advantage of damping a meter movement is that the damping systems will act to slow down the coil and help keep the pointer from overshooting its rest position when the current through the meter is removed. INDICATING ALTERNATING CURRENT Another problem encountered in measuring ac is that the meter movement reacts to the average value of the ac. The value used when working with ac is the effective value (rms value). Therefore, a different scale is used on an ac meter. The scale is marked with the effective value, even though it is the average value to which the meter is reacting. That is why an ac meter will give an incorrect reading if used to measure dc. OTHER METER MOVEMENTS The d’Arsonval meter movement (permanent-magnet moving-coil) is only one type of meter movement. Other types of meter movements can be used for either ac or dc measurement without the use of a rectifier. When galvanometers were mentioned earlier in this topic, it was stated that they could be either electromagnetic or electrodynamic. Electrodynamic meter movements will be discussed at this point. ELECTRODYNAMIC METER MOVEMENT An electrodynamic movement uses the same basic operating principle as the basic moving-coil meter movement, except that the permanent magnet is replaced by fixed coils (fig. 1-15). A moving coil, to which the meter pointer is attached, is suspended between two field coils and connected in series with these coils. The three coils (two field coils and the moving coil) are connected in series across the meter terminals so that the same current flows through each.

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