Hi Lowrider,
DC offset on an AC power line can't be measured with an ordinary multimeter, or with the device you purchased. Although after looking at the description of the device I'm not sure why it indicated an overload. Apparently it automatically senses whether the voltage is AC or DC, and I would have expected it to illuminate the LED corresponding to 120 volts AC.
It might be possible to measure DC offset to some degree of accuracy with an oscilloscope. But a better way would be to construct a low-pass filter that would remove the 60 Hz content, and use that in conjunction with a multimeter. If that might be of interest to you or anyone else reading this thread see the posts by Jea48 and me on page 2 of the following thread (assuming you have the posts sorted oldest first):
https://forum.audiogon.com/discussions/dc-offset-blocker-killer-where-to-buy-in-the-usa?page=2
In any event, good luck in getting the issue resolved.
Best regards,
-- Al
DC offset on an AC power line can't be measured with an ordinary multimeter, or with the device you purchased. Although after looking at the description of the device I'm not sure why it indicated an overload. Apparently it automatically senses whether the voltage is AC or DC, and I would have expected it to illuminate the LED corresponding to 120 volts AC.
It might be possible to measure DC offset to some degree of accuracy with an oscilloscope. But a better way would be to construct a low-pass filter that would remove the 60 Hz content, and use that in conjunction with a multimeter. If that might be of interest to you or anyone else reading this thread see the posts by Jea48 and me on page 2 of the following thread (assuming you have the posts sorted oldest first):
https://forum.audiogon.com/discussions/dc-offset-blocker-killer-where-to-buy-in-the-usa?page=2
In any event, good luck in getting the issue resolved.
Best regards,
-- Al

