Today I was having almost perfect sunlight conditions even for a beginning of winter.
It is known that among other things Greece haves lots of sun light in comparison with any European country.
Here are my thoughts divided in titles.
a) The solar panel.I got lucky with it about physical dimensions VS output in Watt.
At 5V it did see a peak at 67mA, but the average Max output is 60-62mA.
The peak voltage with a diode connected is at 5.8V, which is good enough as target voltage for charging those Nimh.
b) Nimh charge.By having the solar panel as charger which is 90% capable for what a perfect charge requires, I had the chance to actually study the way which the batteries behave when they are getting charged, and even to record with data logging all their behavior.
As soon the voltage got up to 5.36V the panel was able to give 20mA which was not enough to top up the batteries even further.
By powering up the multimeter (U1273A) the battery indicator shown 100% of charge.
By testing one battery of the four with my professional battery tester (with load), it shown 90% of charge at 1.30V.
Generally speaking those results looks great, this multimeter will never run out of power no matter the percentage of the top up charge limit.
c) The U1273A / Power on / consumption.By having the Fluke 28II to monitor the charging current, it was easy as toy to measure and the consumption of the meter.
By removing the batteries and just with the solar panel the meter boot up and feels very happy, even the battery indicator stays at 100% just by the sun even at the maximum OLED brightness level.
OLED Max = 32mA
OLED Normal = 30mA
OLED Low = 22mA
This panel is double in Watts than what the meter needs as power, and so the booting up and operation just by the power of sun is 100% guaranteed.
d) The results with the U1273A which requires a bit more mA that the U1272A are so acceptable that with out second thoughts I did the installation of the second solar panel at the U1272A too.
Today both meters are loaded with solar panels and both look great too.
The truth is that I got also lucky about the placement of the panel at the back, the meter haves rubber feet which keep the panel away from touching the bench or at any surface under the meter, in other words it is safe and well protected.
e) The total cost of the needed materials is no more than 10EUR about two solar panels and diodes.
The latest Sanyo Eneloop 1800 series are not expensive either, and they are the best rechargeable batteries for multimeters due their low self recharge characteristics, I could even say that they are even better than what is needed today by the people which regularly user their meters, and the self discharge never was an issue to them.
As last I have to say that my idea about the placement of the panel and the wiring,
It does not affect the meter safety in any way, and even the batteries they can be removed and charged with a fast charger too.
Success … Success … Success …