Good afternoon kangle2miao,
The DT800 has 11 gain stages from 10 mV up to 20 V.
By default when the DT800 is acquiring data it takes a sample and checks the reading to make sure it is in range. If it isn't it then changes the gain and samples again. It will do this several times to get the best accuracy for the reading.
When we measure a frequency we don't care what the amplitude is just the point it crosses the threshold point (usually zero). By setting the gain to lower than the maximum signal we will clip the top of the signal which basically gives us a square wave. This should get rid of the noise that can cause false readings in the lower range.
Cheers,
Roger
Good afternoon kangle2miao,
The DT800 has 11 gain stages from 10 mV up to 20 V.
By default when the DT800 is acquiring data it takes a sample and checks the reading to make sure it is in range. If it isn't it then changes the gain and samples again. It will do this several times to get the best accuracy for the reading.
When we measure a frequency we don't care what the amplitude is just the point it crosses the threshold point (usually zero). By setting the gain to lower than the maximum signal we will clip the top of the signal which basically gives us a square wave. This should get rid of the noise that can cause false readings in the lower range.
Cheers,
Roger