Thanks John and Jerry for the replies.  
After a visual inspection and noting one questionable looking capacitor, 
(breached seal), I've systematically gone through and checked every single 
electrolytic capacitor in the unit for C and ESR.  No fewer than NINE have been 
identified as definitely defective-  A few of which have effectively failed 
open.  Surprisingly, most of these are Sprague 30D and TVA series.  There are 
also a dozen or so by Amperex/Phillips (some made in Mexico), and three by 
Mepco/Electra.  The three large 125uF 450V can capacitors are Mallory, and 
reformed to full voltage with acceptable leakage current.  Given the multiple 
defective capacitors found, I will be replacing all bur the three large can 
caps before attempting to power up again and troubleshoot further.  
I do wonder if anyone on list has personal experience with the 332B and 332D, 
and just exactly what makes the 332D one decade more accurate according to the 
spec?  Although the ones checked so far are within tolerance, I am considering 
the replacement of all carbon comp resistors with more stable metal films.  
Perhaps this would be a bit overkill and not yield much in the ratio of 
effort:performance though?
Regards,Chris 


Sent from my SMRTphone
-------- Original message --------From: Jerry Hancock <je...@hanler.com> Date: 
2/14/17  11:38 AM  (GMT-06:00) To: Chris Farley <kc9...@yahoo.com>, Discussion 
of precise voltage measurement <volt-nuts@febo.com> Subject: Re: [volt-nuts] 
Fluke 332B 
Most likely the relay in the back left of the box is not opening because the 
switch that controls it (the power/standby/operate) switch is fouled.  If that 
relays contacts were cleaner then the tripping voltage would be lower.  I had 
this happen and heard later it is a common problem.  There is a long shaft that 
could be misaligned from the front to the back where the switch wafers are 
located.  If that gets misaligned, the switch doesn’t open the relay which 
keeps the outputs shorted.  The don’t short to a very low resistance when they 
are dirty.  With the unit turned off, measure and record the resistance across 
the output high and low terminals.  Use ohms law to determine if this is your 
problem.  The current trips at 50mA.  If it is tripping at 3v, then your 
resistance would be about 60 ohms.  Once you get it working, go back and clean 
that relay.

The other common problem is having the vernier current limit set too low.  In 
that case, just turn the current limit dial all the way clockwise.   Note that 
there is also a voltage trip variable control on the voltage trip knob.  



> On Feb 14, 2017, at 8:59 AM, Chris Farley via volt-nuts <volt-nuts@febo.com> 
> wrote:
> 
> Geetings all, 
> 
> New to the list and to a sickly Fluke 332B which kicks out the over current 
> protection at a mere 3 or so Volts output.  
> This is just one of my current projects, but first a question before wasting 
> bandwidth..  I see the list archive page, but is there a secondary, or 
> SEARCHABLE archive of this list anywhere to see what has already been said in 
> the past about this unit?  
> 
> Regards, 
> Chris
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