The Laureate Series Programmable Digital Panel Meters feature a modular design, offering maximum flexibility at a minimal cost. All boards are isolated from meter and power grounds. The base configuration for a digital panel meter, digital counter, or digital timer consists of a main module (with computer and plug-in display boards), a power supply board (Vac or Vdc), and a signal conditioner board. Optional plug-in boards include setpoint controller boards, analog output boards, and digital interface boards. Read more...

Industrial Analog Digital Panel Meters

DC Voltage and Current Input Signal

Accuracy of 0.01% of reading ± 2 counts. High read rates at up to 60 or 50 conversions per second.

    $313.00

    Load Cell Strain Gauge and Microvolt

    Accuracy of 0.01% of reading ± 2 counts. High read rates at up to 60 or 50 conversions per second.

      $396.00

      Scale Meter for Weighing

      Accuracy of 0.01% of reading ± 2 counts. High read rates at up to 60 or 50 conversions per second.

        $353.00

        Process and Ratiometric 

        Accuracy of 0.01% of reading ± 2 counts. High read rates at up to 60 or 50 conversions per second.

          $313.00

          True RMS AC Voltage and Current 

          Accuracy of 0.01% of reading ± 2 counts. High read rates at up to 60 or 50 conversions per second.

            $367.00

            Thermocouple Temperature 

            Accuracy of 0.01% of reading ± 2 counts. High read rates at up to 60 or 50 conversions per second.

              $313.00

              RTD Temperature 

              Accuracy of 0.01% of reading ± 2 counts. High read rates at up to 60 or 50 conversions per second.

                $313.00

                Ohmmeter for Resistance in Ohms

                Accuracy of 0.01% of reading ± 2 counts. High read rates at up to 60 or 50 conversions per second.

                  $313.00

                  What Is an Analog Digital Panel Meter?

                  An analog Digital Panel Meter takes a continuous, varying electrical signal — DC voltage, DC current, AC voltage, AC current, a thermocouple millivolt signal, an RTD resistance change, or a 4-20 mA / 0-10V process signal — and turns it into a clean numeric reading on an LED or LCD display. The word "analog" describes the input it's reading, not the display: internally, the meter conditions and amplifies that incoming signal, runs it through an analog-to-digital converter, and shows the result as a scaled, easy-to-read number in whatever engineering unit the application calls for (volts, amps, °C, PSI, RPM, and so on). Because the signal conditioning is matched to the input type, an analog Digital Panel Meter built for thermocouple input behaves very differently inside than one built for AC current — even though both end up looking the same on the front panel.

                  Matching an Analog Digital Panel Meter to Your Signal

                  • What you're actually measuring: DC voltage/current, true RMS AC voltage/current, thermocouple or RTD temperature, a 4-20 mA / 0-10V process transmitter, load cell millivolt output, or a frequency/pulse signal each need a different input stage on the meter.
                  • Signal conditioning: Weak or noisy signals (microvolt load cell outputs, for example) need amplification and filtering before conversion; check that the meter's input stage is rated for the signal level you're feeding it.
                  • Resolution and update rate: A fast-changing process may need a higher read rate than a slow-moving temperature loop — match the conversion rate to how quickly your signal actually moves.
                  • Retransmission and outputs: If the reading needs to feed a PLC, chart recorder, or alarm relay, confirm the meter offers an analog output or relay board to pass that value along.
                  • Mounting and supply voltage: Verify the DIN cutout and available AC/DC supply match what the meter requires before you order.

                  Typical Analog Digital Panel Meter Uses

                  • Battery and power supply checks: A DC voltage input meter gives an instant readout of battery bank or supply rail voltage without pulling out a handheld multimeter.
                  • 4-20 mA loop readout: Process meters convert a current-loop signal back into the real-world value it represents — pressure, flow, level — right at the panel.
                  • Furnace and oven control: Thermocouple-input meters give operators a direct temperature readout for heat-treat and processing equipment.
                  • Motor and equipment diagnostics: AC current input meters flag overload or imbalance on three-phase motors before a failure happens.

                  Frequently Asked Questions

                  What does "analog" mean on a Digital Panel Meter?

                  It refers to the type of signal going into the meter, not what's on the display. An analog Digital Panel Meter accepts a continuous electrical signal — voltage, current, resistance, or a millivolt thermocouple output — and converts it into a digital readout. The display is always digital; the input is what's analog.

                  Can one analog Digital Panel Meter handle more than one signal type?

                  Generally no — each analog Digital Panel Meter is built around a signal-conditioner board matched to a specific input family (DC, true RMS AC, thermocouple, RTD, load cell, or process current/voltage). Switching input types usually means swapping that conditioner board rather than reconfiguring the same board.

                  How do I know if I need true RMS on an AC input meter?

                  If the AC signal comes from a variable frequency drive, switching power supply, or any non-linear load, the waveform is distorted and a standard averaging meter will misread it. A true RMS analog Digital Panel Meter calculates the actual heating-equivalent value of the signal, so it stays accurate regardless of waveform shape.

                  Why does my thermocouple meter need cold junction compensation?

                  A thermocouple only produces a voltage relative to the temperature difference between its measuring tip and its connection point (the "cold junction"). Without compensating for the cold junction's own temperature, the reading would drift with ambient conditions. Analog Digital Panel Meters built for thermocouple input handle this compensation internally so the displayed temperature stays accurate.

                  What's the difference between 2-wire, 3-wire, and 4-wire RTD hookups?

                  A 2-wire RTD connection is simplest but lets lead-wire resistance add error to the reading. 3-wire and 4-wire connections let the meter measure and subtract out that lead resistance, which matters more as cable runs get longer. For precision temperature work, 3-wire or 4-wire is the safer choice.

                  Can an analog Digital Panel Meter send its reading to a PLC?

                  Yes, with the right option board. Most analog Digital Panel Meter models can add a scaled 4-20 mA or 0-10V analog output, a relay board for alarm/setpoint switching, or a serial/Ethernet board for Modbus communication — letting the same meter serve as a local display and a data source for your control system at once.

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