Exercise: Continuity Tests¶
Objective¶
Learn typical scale of resistance units.
Metals are generally good at conducting electricity; they have low resistance. Common insulators (including air) have a resistance high enough it can’t be easily measured. So the most basic resistance measurement is the ‘continuity check’ which simply tests whether the resistance is low enough to be considered a conductor, or whether it is unexpectedly high representing an open circuit.
Steps and observations¶
- Set the DMM to resistance: Ohms, or the large greek omega letter Ω. The DMM will emit a small voltage to measure the current which flows in response through the resistance path between the probes.
- Hold the probe tips in your fingers. This is safe, the DMM voltage emitted is very low. Squeeze harder. Moisten the contact point. You should see a body resistance reading which changes with conditions.
- Touch the probes to a coin, keys, and metal tool surfaces. If you fail to see a low reading, try changing contact points, scratching the surface, and pressing harder.
- Touch the probes across the leads of a resistor. The quarter-watt resistors with wire leads we use in the lab have colored bands which encode the specified value.
- Touch the probes across the leads of an LED. Reverse the connections.
- Try measuring resistance through other natural objects, food, furniture, etc. Write down your results.
Comments¶
Typical resistance measurements along a short wire will be less than 1 ohm and are often dominated by the resistance of the contact point and probe wires. Component resistors are available in standard ranges from a fraction of an ohm to tens of millions of ohms. For our typical sensor circuits we will be using resistors in the 100 to 10000 (10K) ohm range.
Other Files¶
- Fritzing file:
continuity-tests.fzz