Joe:
The 731A and 731B were run at room temp and therefore were subject to room variations. They both use the same "Reference Amplifier" as the 732A & B use. I have one 731B and it is amazingly stable for the room temp variations I experience at home. When I was working we had a 731B that was also very good. I had sent it for calibration over a 10 year period and the drift was equal to, or better than the 732 series. At the end of the 10 years it was absolutely stable at less than 1 ppm. This was all being done at a Fluke Service Center that was located in Milpitas California, and their 732As were being routinely sent to Fluke in Everett WA.
The difference between the 731 & 732 is that starting with the 732A all of the temperature sensitive components were enclosed in a oven assembly that had heaters surrounding the oven enclosure which is running at 45 degrees C. This includes all of the resistors and adjustment pots. I have torn down a 732A to the oven assembly and gone inside the assembly to replace a component. It is a real trick to do this, but by being careful it can be done.
The fact that the 732As have been in operation for a much longer period of time probably explains the lower drift rates than the 732Bs. The 732As have been "aged" much longer. I know people who prefer the 732A over the 732B because of this. The only problem with the 732A is that the heaters use more power than the 732Bs. Early manuals spec 24 hour battery operation, but later manuals have changed that to 12 hours. All of the 732As I have observed will only run for about 12 to 15 hours before the "in cal" light goes out meaning that the batteries have dropped below about 22 volts. The 732B is speced at 72 hours battery operation but I have no experience if this is true.
I guess I am a real "Volt-Nut" in that I have 6 732As at home right now. I inter-compare them once a week. The last time I was able to verify what the official "volt" is was in 2005. Right now I need to find a good Cal Lab in the South SF Bay Area where I can have one of them "certified" against their traceable standards. The Fluke service center was closed years ago.
Bill
Bill,
With six 732B's, you certainly qualify as a volt nut.
Joe Gray
W5JG
On Aug 20, 2013 10:37 AM, "Bill Gold" wpgold3637@att.net wrote:
Joe:
The 731A and 731B were run at room temp and therefore were subject to
room variations. They both use the same "Reference Amplifier" as the 732A
& B use. I have one 731B and it is amazingly stable for the room temp
variations I experience at home. When I was working we had a 731B that was
also very good. I had sent it for calibration over a 10 year period and
the drift was equal to, or better than the 732 series. At the end of the
10 years it was absolutely stable at less than 1 ppm. This was all being
done at a Fluke Service Center that was located in Milpitas California, and
their 732As were being routinely sent to Fluke in Everett WA.
The difference between the 731 & 732 is that starting with the 732A
all of the temperature sensitive components were enclosed in a oven
assembly that had heaters surrounding the oven enclosure which is running
at 45 degrees C. This includes all of the resistors and adjustment pots.
I have torn down a 732A to the oven assembly and gone inside the assembly
to replace a component. It is a real trick to do this, but by being
careful it can be done.
The fact that the 732As have been in operation for a much longer
period of time probably explains the lower drift rates than the 732Bs. The
732As have been "aged" much longer. I know people who prefer the 732A over
the 732B because of this. The only problem with the 732A is that the
heaters use more power than the 732Bs. Early manuals spec 24 hour battery
operation, but later manuals have changed that to 12 hours. All of the
732As I have observed will only run for about 12 to 15 hours before the "in
cal" light goes out meaning that the batteries have dropped below about 22
volts. The 732B is speced at 72 hours battery operation but I have no
experience if this is true.
I guess I am a real "Volt-Nut" in that I have 6 732As at home right
now. I inter-compare them once a week. The last time I was able to verify
what the official "volt" is was in 2005. Right now I need to find a good
Cal Lab in the South SF Bay Area where I can have one of them "certified"
against their traceable standards. The Fluke service center was closed
years ago.
Bill
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Bill wrote:
Right now I need to find a good Cal Lab in the South SF Bay Area
where I can have one of them "certified" against their traceable
standards. The Fluke service center [in Milpitas] was closed years ago.
If you look at the uncertainties in the "scope of accreditation"
documents for the labs in your area and compare them to the Fluke
Everett uncertainties, you may decide to send your 732A under power
to Everett (I do, from much farther away). The Sandia Primary
Standards Lab would be another good choice, if that is more convenient.
Best regards,
Charles