neonstrobe
- Joined May 15, 2009
- 200
A note of caution on cheap shunts - check the specifications. One I bought for 100A was only rated at 50A continuously. The element was really too small for 100A continuously. I ended up with a 200mm length of copper bus folded in a U shape (yes this might create a small inductance but the area is small) and with the TCR of copper. If possible build the shunt out of manganin or Eureka (constantan) but it will need to be big. I used a x100 D.C. amplifier to measure the voltage.
At 500A 1 milliohm will dissipate 250W so you really do need a low resistance (I think my copper shunt was 0.1 milliohm for 100A) and you need it to be physically able to dissipate whatever power expected. Connections to the shunt need to be very low resistance too. In fact you ought to use a microohmmeter to make sure the connections don't add up to much. (less than 1 microohm really). I used half-inch bolts.
At 500A 1 milliohm will dissipate 250W so you really do need a low resistance (I think my copper shunt was 0.1 milliohm for 100A) and you need it to be physically able to dissipate whatever power expected. Connections to the shunt need to be very low resistance too. In fact you ought to use a microohmmeter to make sure the connections don't add up to much. (less than 1 microohm really). I used half-inch bolts.

