As always read the manual before operating.The first option board mentioned, has nothing to do with special programming or a programming device. It is just straight forward, wired or TTl programming, with pull-up resistors. Further is it a standard BCD output, very basic TTl. The modification you cleaned out is a Dana France modification. (See the sticker on the front) It has a switch on the front, to select between the normal 10VDC ratio input and a 33 1/3VAC ratio input. You did not have to remove anything. Just resolder the wires and fix the relay. Put the switch to 10VDC. The relay is not engaged and everything is working normal, like there is no modification. When the switch is on 33 1/3VAC, you just ad a true RMS converter, to the ratio input. This is a early version. Later came the 5940, which had a factory modification. Questions? Just ask. Danafan/The Netherlands
@TonyAlbus3 жыл бұрын
Hallo Arnould, heb jij toevallig the manual van DANA counter model 7930, hij lijkt erg op de 8030 , maar ik kan van de 7930 niets van vinden, misschien kan jij mij helpen?
@chefchaudard35803 жыл бұрын
I worked for Racal Dana at the time (in the 80s). Maybe I fixed and calibrated this one.
@chefchaudard35803 жыл бұрын
13:10 the reference is actually the glass zener diode on the left of the little board. These diodes were aged several years by Dana before use, so to be as stable as possible. 18:20 There was an engineer in Racal Dana France, Loïc, who designed specific boards for bespoke requirements. The board, as you mention, was added to add some ranges for the external voltage reference input. I have no idea why some customers required it, but it was popular. Military for some test bench, maybe? I remember fixing some non modified DVMs the customer tried to use with an improper voltage, overloading the input stage with devastating effects.
@PicaDelphon4 жыл бұрын
Made me do a Dust out on my DANA 5500 and after 50 year it still running better then the Crap other sell..