<div dir="ltr"><div class="gmail_extra"><div class="gmail_quote">On Thu, Sep 3, 2015 at 11:07 PM, Stephen Villano <span dir="ltr"><<a href="mailto:stephen.p.villano@gmail.com" target="_blank">stephen.p.villano@gmail.com</a>></span> wrote:<br><blockquote class="gmail_quote" style="margin:0 0 0 .8ex;border-left:1px #ccc solid;padding-left:1ex">OK, let's preface this with, I am a certified electronics technician.<br>
<br>
OK, a VOM, pretty much *any* VOM will be fooled by ripple.<br>
DC power in ancient and familiar for me days of analog circuitry, had<br>
mains frequency hum. Most failed to notice, those that did got extra<br>
filter caps and occasionally, a massive inductor coil in a pi circuit.<br>
<br>
Today, we're in the digital age. A 5 volt supply supplies, with luck,<br>
5 volts. What is of import is, sampling rate of the VOM, which is why<br>
I previously mentioned an oscilloscope.<br>
One can end up with 2.5 volts *real* DC and a full five volts of<br>
spikes that result in no useful supply to a logic circuit.<br>
At 2.5 volts or so, logic goes into an indeterminate state, which<br>
means getting confused,senile and eventually locked of destructive,<br>
depending upon the logic usage.<br>
I've personally witnessed many hard drive physical failures, courtesy<br>
of a lousy 12 volt supply that measured fine with a cheap VOM, but<br>
looked like pure DC spikes on an oscilloscope . Later, better VOM's<br>
had RMS, which was *really* revealing, as there is no sine wave in DC.<br>
<br>
Hence, my suggestion at first to try a new power supply.<br>
No need for detailed comprehension of two years and change of<br>
electronics school, no 40 years of experience and no requirement of<br>
more advanced electronic diagnostic equipment that you'd also have a<br>
massive learning curve to learn how to utilize.<br>
Based upon my experience and many, many, many other users of the HDHR<br>
Prime, swap out the power supply.<br>
If you're as proficient as I am, replace the defective filter<br>
capacitors. I've done that, via measures that'd give my fire marshal a<br>
stroke, but the caps got replaced.<br>
Assuming that you also own an ESR meter, to find the defective capacitors.<br>
Mine is aging, when it fails, I'll go straight to replacement.<br>
The cost isn't worthy of the benefit.</blockquote><div><br></div><div>Thanks for the explanation! I don't have a fancy Fluke meter but it's a half-way decent Extech True RMS meter. When reading VAC (in mV mode) it shows 0, as well as if I try Hz, but I'm not sure what the input to the meter is supposed to look like for cycles...</div><div><br></div><div>Thanks,</div><div>Richard </div></div></div></div>