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And watch out for the "True RMS Meter" that won't do anything but AC sine.
Read more than the "specifications" in the operators manual. Many will not do a waveform like the eGo output.
RMS measurements are easy with pure sine wave or pure DC. It's a little harder with complex waveforms.
I used to calibrate some pretty crappy, but expensive DMMs.
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For those cheapo meters that don't give double the DC read (and zero on reverse polarity) when AC fuction is used, I get from the "What does an AC voltmeter measure?" article By Louis Dudzikon that (1 – D) ≅ ACread / 2.2 x DCread. Here, D is the fraction for duty rate. Expressed somewhat different, D = 1 - 0.455*ACread/DCread. And with D determined, Vrms = DCread/√D. So "True RMS" from cheapo meter. At least in theory. But some problems in actual practice on the eGo wave form. I have a Fluke 11 DMM, a "non - True RMS" meter, and one that gives positive reads on the AC function in either polarity from an eGo. But problem is that the eGo produces such an unstable and changing output on the AC scale on that meter as to make the equation mentioned worthless. And, actually, don't get a real stable value on the DC function either. At least this is so in an unloaded state from an eGo.
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