Easy enough to find out. Hook it up backwards. Forward scale will now show reverse power and vice versa. If the same needle is still dead, you probably have a blown diode in that side of the meter.I'm kinda leaning towards broken.
73
Easy enough to find out. Hook it up backwards. Forward scale will now show reverse power and vice versa. If the same needle is still dead, you probably have a blown diode in that side of the meter.I'm kinda leaning towards broken.
I'll try thatEasy enough to find out. Hook it up backwards. Forward scale will now show reverse power and vice versa. If the same needle is still dead, you probably have a blown diode in that side of the meter.
73
I'll try that
You may be right about my SWR. I hooked my Diawa meter backwards like Nomad suggested and the opposite needle moves, so it should be working correctly. But as I started really looking at the scale I noticed for the first time the needle sits at 0 and just a little further down the needle is 1.1 reading. And that is what the meter reads before keying the mic. 1.2 is the slightest tic above 1.1There are only two possibilities if only one needle is moving...
1. Your SWR is perfect, in which case only the forward scale needle moves as there is no reflected power to measure.
2. Your meter is broken.
As Greg said above, it really is very simple to use.
I don't know how im just seeing this video? But I am the kid that could never find the Easter eggs!!! That is the exact Diawa meter I have. I did go up and down the band above and below 40 but still only had the slightest movement of the needle. If i don't figure it out I'll take it and let Enterprise have a look at it, I need to take my tube amp to him anyway. I appreciate the video, Thank you.I made a quick video of my meter working. I'm not a pro videographer but you can see how the meter works anyway.
Make sure you're putting about 5 watts carrier into it, and that the meter is on the 20 watt scale in average mode. Not pep.I don't know how im just seeing this video? But I am the kid that could never find the Easter eggs!!! That is the exact Diawa meter I have. I did go up and down the band above and below 40 but still only had the slightest movement of the needle. If i don't figure it out I'll take it and let Enterprise have a look at it, I need to take my tube amp to him anyway. I appreciate the video, Thank you.
BINGO!!!! You figured it out!! I didn't know that about the carrier watts, my radio only does 4 ish watts and on the low side it will do 2 watts. After reading your reply I immediately went to the radio and checked, 2 and 4 ish watts nothing, but after I turned my little 250 watt amp on, I only run on medium power, put the meter on the 300 watt scale and checked the SWR it reads 1.5 exactly the same as the PDC with the amp on. Now my question is why will the PDC read my SWR with only the 2 to 4 watts going in and the Diawa doesn't?Make sure you're putting about 5 watts carrier into it, and that the meter is on the 20 watt scale in average mode. Not pep.
I have to believe it's in the calibration. I sent my Diawa in to the factory with a note requesting they calibrate it to the center of the scale for each power setting. Diawa usually calibrates the meter to the top of their scales, and this will make the meter less sensitive towards the lower end. According to the tech I spoke with, they do this because people tend to care more about the final power output than the average. By having it calibrated in the center, I now only have a small discrepancy on either end, rather than out of whack on the lower end. I guess the smaller, more portable meters are more sensitive to lower power, and that kinda makes sense, I guess. Plus, I would say that the Diawa is more tailored to the HAM operators who normally run higher powered rigs.BINGO!!!! You figured it out!! I didn't know that about the carrier watts, my radio only does 4 ish watts and on the low side it will do 2 watts. After reading your reply I immediately went to the radio and checked, 2 and 4 ish watts nothing, but after I turned my little 250 watt amp on, I only run on medium power, put the meter on the 300 watt scale and checked the SWR it reads 1.5 exactly the same as the PDC with the amp on. Now my question is why will the PDC read my SWR with only the 2 to 4 watts going in and the Diawa doesn't?
Not a problem. That's what everyone is here for! I would at least call them and see if you can get to speak with a senior tech. Explain that all your equipment seems to land in the center of the scale so you want it calibrated to the center. the guy I spoke with was really good, knew everything about the guts of the meter. This was a few years ago now, so hopefully things haven't changed. They only charged me for shipping.Greg T, I appreciate all of you're help, I've thought for a year now I paid good money for a paperweight. Now I'm thinking maybe I should do like you and have it calibrated. But at least with the amp on it's reading the correct SWR. Im just happy its working because I really like the look of the meter.