An old style d’Arsonville type iron vane voltmeter
Jeff, my respected friend, in the almost 20 years that we have shared on this site, the number of times that I have disagreed with you can probably be counted on one hand.
I think that you have just moved me to the ring finger.
Two completely different types of meter movement.
The D'Arsonval, or galvanometer is a DC meter and responds to the average of a varying DC current.
For voltage measurements a series resistor is used, for current measurements a shunt is used.
With the addition of diodes, AC voltages or currents may be indicated.
Unfortunately the value of interest for AC circuits is the RMS value, and the D'Arsonval movement responds to average values.
For use on power AC circuits, a form factor is applied to the meter scale calibration so that while average values are measured, RMS values are displayed.
As I recall, the form factor for a sine wave is 1.1:1, however the exact value is not as important the fact that the form factor changes with changes in the shape of waveform under test.
Short anecdote, long version on request.
A 277:480 Volt power transformer bank to supply a flood water pumping station:
When the voltages were checked on the unloaded transformer bank, the ratio between line to line versus line to neutral were noticeably NOT root three.
This was checked with three different meters.
Why?
The voltage waveforms of an unloaded wye transformer connection are distorted and not true sine waves.
This was before the days of digital meters and all of the meters were D'Arsonval based meters.
We were not looking at an error in voltages, we were looking at an error in measurement due to inappropriate form factors for the distorted waveforms.
By the way, once a load was placed on the transformer bank, the waveform distortion was swamped out and the measured voltages showed the proper ratio.
What does this mean here? A D'Arsonval based instrument may only be used for accurate AC measurments when the shape and form factor of the measured waveform are known.
What is the solution? An often use description of an RMS current is an equivalent heating effect to a DC current.
Will a hot wire or thermo-couple based instrument solve your measurement issue?