Module 04
DMM Mastery
The digital multimeter is the instrument you'll touch a hundred times a day. Open visuals/03-test-equipment.html for the annotated front panel and probe-placement diagrams. This module makes every mode second nature and — more importantly — teaches the in-circuit traps that separate accurate techs from part-swappers.
1. The cardinal rules
- Voltage: across. Current: through. Resistance: power off.
- In current mode the meter is nearly a short circuit. Putting an ammeter across a supply is the classic blown-fuse (or blown-board) mistake. Always break the circuit and insert the meter in series — and put the probes back in the V jacks when done. Leaving a probe in the A jack and then measuring "voltage" shorts whatever you touch.
- Never measure ohms/continuity/diode on a powered circuit. Readings are garbage and you can damage the meter or the board. Discharge bulk capacitors first (big caps hold charge long after power-off — verify <1V across them in DC volts before resistance work).
- Trust, but verify the meter: before declaring something open/dead, touch your probes together (should beep, ~0Ω) and check the meter battery. Before declaring "no voltage," verify the meter on a known-live source. "Test your tester" is a habit that prevents false diagnoses.
2. Mode by mode
DC Volts (V⎓) — your primary mode
- Black probe to ground (clip it — free hand matters), red probe to the point under test.
- Auto-range is fine for bench work. The meter's ~10MΩ input barely loads most circuits.
- What you're usually doing: verifying rails (within ±5% of nominal unless the drawing says tighter), checking regulator in vs out, measuring across a component to see what it drops.
- Millivolts matter: mV mode reveals voltage drops along traces and across closed contacts/fuses — a "0Ω" path carrying current shows a few mV; a corroded one shows a lot more.
AC Volts (V~)
- Reads RMS (get a true-RMS meter). Use for AC inputs (115VAC/400Hz aircraft power), transformer secondaries.
- DMM AC bandwidth is low (≈ kHz) — it cannot meaningfully measure high-frequency ripple or signals; that's scope work.
Resistance (Ω)
- Power off, caps discharged. For a trustworthy value, isolate the component — lift one leg or one end of an SMD, or rely on the in-circuit rules below.
- In-circuit interpretation rules:
- Reading ≈ marked value → probably fine.
- Reading lower than marked → maybe fine (parallel paths) — isolate to confirm before condemning.
- Reading higher than marked → genuinely suspect: the part or its joints are open/degraded. Parallel paths can't raise a reading.
- A reading that climbs slowly → you're charging a capacitor on the net; normal.
- Reverse the probes and re-measure: a big difference means semiconductor junctions are in the path — interpret accordingly.
Continuity (beeper)
- Beeps below ~30–50Ω (meter-dependent). For: fuses, traces, connector pin-to-solder-tail, cable cores, "is this net connected to that pin?"
- Trace verification against the schematic is a core repair task: net on schematic → beep every point that should be common. No beep where there should be one = open trace/via/joint. Beep where there shouldn't = short.
- The beeper is fast but crude — it can beep through a 30Ω fault. For "is this joint really good," use ohms or mV-drop under load.
Diode test (the secret weapon)
- Sources ~1mA, displays forward voltage. Healthy silicon junction: 0.5–0.7V forward, OL reverse. Schottky: 0.15–0.45V. LED: 1.6–3.3V (lights faintly). Germanium (old equipment): 0.2–0.3V.
- Shorted junction = low both ways. Open = OL both ways. This tests diodes, BJT junctions, MOSFET body diodes, and IC protection diodes (every IC pin has ESD diodes to its rails — diode-test from ground to each pin gives a "signature"; comparing signatures between a good and bad board finds dead pins fast).
- Rail short-finding: diode test (or ohms) from each power rail to ground, power off. A healthy 3.3V rail might read a few hundred Ω to a few kΩ (and charge caps); a dead short reads near 0V/0Ω — then the hunt begins (section 4).
Capacitance
- Out-of-circuit (or one leg lifted) only — in-circuit, everything else on the net adds to the reading. Good for "is this 100µF cap still 100µF," useless for ESR (the more common electrolytic failure) — that needs an ESR meter or scope-and-ripple judgment.
Current (µA/mA/A)
- Break the circuit, insert meter in series, correct jack, correct range. The meter's internal shunt drops some voltage ("burden voltage") — on low-voltage circuits this can disturb operation.
- On the bench you'll more often get current from the bench supply's readout or by measuring mV across a known resistor in the path (I = V/R) — both avoid breaking the circuit.
- Supply current is a diagnosis in itself: a board that should draw 150mA drawing 2A has a short; drawing 5mA has something not starting. Know the expected draw (test spec) before powering any UUT.
3. Measurement discipline
- One hand behind your back when probing live circuits above ~30V (28V aircraft bus is at the edge; 115VAC definitely) — keeps current paths off your chest.
- Probe on the pin/pad, not the trace — fine probes slip; a slipped probe bridging two IC pins can kill a good board. Use micro-grabbers/hooks on fine-pitch work, or probe at vias and test points.
- Conformal-coated boards: probe at designated test points, or use approved coating-piercing technique — and log any coating penetration for repair.
- Write numbers down. "5V rail was 4.82V" is data; "rail looked okay" is not.
4. Technique: finding a short to ground on a rail
The dreaded "rail measures 0.3Ω to ground" with 60 capacitors on the net:
- Look and smell first — burnt part, discolored mask, cracked MLCC.
- Divide by geography: if the rail crosses removable links (0Ω resistors, ferrite beads, connectors), open them and re-measure each side — instant half-split.
- mV-drop gradient method: inject a small current-limited current into the shorted rail from a bench supply (e.g., 1–2A limit at well under the rail voltage). Measure millivolts across the rail at different points: the voltage falls as you approach the short — follow the gradient downhill. (This is what dedicated short-locators automate.)
- Thermal method: with that same limited current, the shorted part warms. Finger, IR thermometer, thermal camera, or isopropyl-alcohol evaporation finds it.
- Last resort: lift components on the net one at a time, starting with the statistically guilty (MLCCs, tantalums, TVS diodes, the main IC).
5. Technique: junction signature comparison (no schematic needed)
With a known-good board: power off, diode mode, black probe on ground; touch every pin of a connector/IC on both boards and compare readings. Mismatch = pursue that net. This is one of the fastest ways to localize damage on complex digital boards and pairs perfectly with ATE failure tickets.
6. Self-check
- Why must the meter never be in current mode across a power supply? It's a near-short — direct short circuit through the meter
- In-circuit, R12 (10kΩ marked) reads 14kΩ. Suspect or fine? Suspect — parallel paths only lower readings; it or its joints are degraded/open
- Diode test on D3 reads 0.002V both directions. Shorted — but confirm it isn't a parallel path: lift one leg
- The 3.3V rail reads dead short. Name three localization techniques in order of preference. Visual; split at beads/links; mV-gradient or thermal under current-limited injection
- What does 0.187V on diode test across an unknown diode suggest? Schottky — normal, not shorted