KYORITSU 2009R User Manual

Page 8

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̶ 6 ̶

*Effective Value (RMS)

Most alternating currents and voltages are expressed in effective
values, which are also referred to as RMS (Root-Mean-Square)
values.
The effective value is the square root of the average of square of
alternating current or voltage values.
Many clamp meters using a conventional rectifying circuit have

"RMS" scales for AC measurement. The scales are, however, actually
calibrated in terms of the effective value of a sine wave though the

clamp meter is responding to the average value. The calibration
is done with a conversion factor of 1.111 for sine wave, which is

found by dividing the effective value by the average value. These

instruments are therefore in error if the input voltage or current has
some other shape than sine wave.

*CF (Crest Factor) is found by dividing the peak value by the
effective value.
Examples:
DC: CF =1
Sine wave: CF=1.414
Square wave with a 1: 10 duty ratio: CF=3

Waveform

Crest factor

CF

Average value

Vavg

Effective value

Vrms

Conversion

factor

Vrms/ Vavg

Reading errors for

average sensing

instrument

≒0.637

≒1.111

≒1.414

≒1.155

≒1.732

=-3.8%

×100%

=11.1%

≒0.707

2

1

2

2

π

A

3

D

1

3

2

D

1

3

A

0.5A×1.111-

3

A

A

A

A

A

1

0.5A

1

0%

2

A

π

AD

f

A

=A・D

T

2

A

A×1,111-A Ч100

Ч100

D

A

D

1

A

D

A

(1.111  -1)

D

A
0

A
0

A
0

A

0

T

D=f/T

f

3

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