Introduction; Inductive Coupling (Fig. 1A); Capacitive Coupling (Fig. 1B) - Kenwood DM-81 Manual

Dip meter
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INTRODUCTION

A dip meter is used for adjustment of radio equipment and antennas. The DM-81 is a
self-excited oscillator designed for external coupling to the equipment being tested. It
features both inductive and capacitive coupling for measuring enclosed coils and toroidal
coils (patent pending). This is not possible with conventional testing instruments.
The DM-81 has the following two functions:
Inductive coupling
As shown (Figure 1A), place the coil unit of the dip meter in close proximity to
the circuit being measured.
Adjust the dial. When the dip meter oscillation frequency coincides with the
resonant frequency (tuned circuit), oscillating energy is absorbed by the circuit,
thus decreasing the oscillation strength.
This strength is indicated on the meter. The pointer swings back momentarily at
the resonant point. Since the meter pointer dips at a tuned point, this instrument is
called a dip meter.
Capacitive coupling
This is a special feature of the DM-81 which is not found in any other dip meter.
The resonant frequency can be checked simply by touching the capacitance probe
to the hot side of the resonant circuit under test, instead of coupling the DM-81's
coil and measuring inductively. The frequency is read directly on the dial. See
Figure 1B.
Radio equipment is miniaturized and most coils are enclosed in metal shields.
Also, toroidal coils are used in many types of radio equipment, and these coils do
not couple to conventional dip meters. The DM-81 has solved this problem.
KENWOOD DM-81
1

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