If you have little amps running around and need to know how many, the 485 Autoranging Picoammeter is the meter for you. Rather than showing only approximate amps, the 485 will measure and store up to 100 readings and then allow data recall at a later time for evaluation. In the data store mode, readings can be take from 3 readings/second to 1 reading/hour in 6 selectable ranges. Large 4 1/2-digit LCD provides the resolution (0.1 pA) needed for today's technology. Measures from 2 nA to 2 mA full scale with a 1 year accuracy of ?(0.4% + 4 counts) on the 2 nA range (worst case). Other handy features include manual or autoranging, polarity/range/status/overrange indications, and an analog output (+1 V = -10000 counts, except +100 mV on 2 nA range).
Key Features and Benefits:
Database toolkit -- direct access to all popular database packages
Internet toolkit -- monitor/control from your Internet browser
32-bit Windows XP/2000 support
Works with IEEE-488 instruments, RS-232 and RS-485 devices, and data acquisition boards and cards from Keithley
Includes 100s of instrument-specific libraries
Free run-time creation and distribution included
Open environment:
DDE data pipeline and OLE to other Windows applications
DLL custom functions through Windows-language program
OCX and ActiveX custom controls from a number of vendors
Flexible,
high-resolution graphics with sliders, selector buttons, stripchart,
graphing, labeling, and annotation; design your own live switches
Built-in analysis with trigonometric, statistical, logical, curve fitting, frequency, and time domain functions
Takes care of details such as automatic data type handling and syntax
Security feature enables password protection for all or part of an application
Error handling for tests that need to run overnight
TestPoint lets you build complete applications
quickly and easily without drawing, connecting, or wiring icons, or
writing lines of code. You program in the same way you might describe
your application to someone else! Simply drag and drop objects
representing graphs, displays, and other parts of your test in a
display panel. On an Action List, list the things you want your test to
do. TestPoint builds the code to run your test and provides you with a
description of the test.