Component Identification Required

Thread Starter

Mr. Multimeter

Joined Sep 17, 2018
68
The component SCA 550, would you confirm this is a varistor? I cannot find any datasheet on this particular model/component nSCA550.jpg umber..?

Thanks in advance !
 

Thread Starter

Mr. Multimeter

Joined Sep 17, 2018
68

rsjsouza

Joined Apr 21, 2014
425
How is it connected? From the photograph it seems connected to one leg of the thermistor on the right, but I can't tell for sure.
It certainly has the shape of either a MOV or a capacitor. Capacitors are usually not placed close to the input terminals of a DMM.
 

Thread Starter

Mr. Multimeter

Joined Sep 17, 2018
68
How is it connected? From the photograph it seems connected to one leg of the thermistor on the right, but I can't tell for sure.
It certainly has the shape of either a MOV or a capacitor. Capacitors are usually not placed close to the input terminals of a DMM.
123.jpg
 

rsjsouza

Joined Apr 21, 2014
425
Just be mindful of the following: there is a lot more to a DMM's input protection than the parts themselves. Not only the routing matters (I have seen fuses in series with the voltage jack, for example) but, depending on the nature of the event, a transient may go right through protection devices such as MOVs and GDTs without giving chance for them to react.
.
 

Thread Starter

Mr. Multimeter

Joined Sep 17, 2018
68
Just be mindful of the following: there is a lot more to a DMM's input protection than the parts themselves. Not only the routing matters (I have seen fuses in series with the voltage jack, for example) but, depending on the nature of the event, a transient may go right through protection devices such as MOVs and GDTs without giving chance for them to react.
.
There's many variables when it comes to input protection and meter robustness but the fact a vendor implemented more than a 2 cent glass fuse says alot about that manufacturer. Transients and Spikes are by there very nature highly unpredictable so by having input protection even at the most basic level it is a definate step in the right direction as far as safety implementation is concerned.
 

rsjsouza

Joined Apr 21, 2014
425
There's many variables when it comes to input protection and meter robustness but the fact a vendor implemented more than a 2 cent glass fuse says alot about that manufacturer. Transients and Spikes are by there very nature highly unpredictable so by having input protection even at the most basic level it is a definate step in the right direction as far as safety implementation is concerned.
No question this is a step in the right direction, but it is a very different thing to assume it has decent input protection. My reply references that last statement.
 

Thread Starter

Mr. Multimeter

Joined Sep 17, 2018
68
No question this is a step in the right direction, but it is a very different thing to assume it has decent input protection. My reply references that last statement.
I'm not assuming anything :)
It's ETL/INTERTEK Certified so the mfr is adhering to more than the usual CE aka BS protection schema/model. Impressive for a 10$ DMM.
 

rsjsouza

Joined Apr 21, 2014
425
I'm not assuming anything :)
It's ETL/INTERTEK Certified so the mfr is adhering to more than the usual CE aka BS protection schema/model. Impressive for a 10$ DMM.
Ok, that is new information. Thanks for sharing.
What meter is this? Would you mind sharing the manufacturer and model number? I don't see in this post.
 
Top