EEFinder said:
I attached pictures reflecting the above situation.
what's the reasoning behind that gauges difference in terms of their fabrication. More explicitly why DC gauge won't read the AC or at least the RMS value
Judging from your photos i strongly suspect you are in a switchgear room or control room of a substation that's handling AC. Reason i say that is I've simply never heard of a DC substation, and those breakers are labelled "substation tie". I'd expect AC in a substation, in the thousands of amps .those meters report.
It is vitally important that switchgear have present DC control voltage to operate it. In my plant we used a simple white light, and our DC control voltage was 130 volts. But i see that 250 is also a standard..
http://ecmweb.com/content/switchgear-battery-sizing-hand
I think the DC meter indicates not only the presence of control voltage like our light did, but its health..
Now to whhat's the difference in AC and DC meters:
Those look like industry standard KX241 style meters which come with internals appropriate to their use.
The basic DC meter is the D'Arsonval galvanometer, described here. Basically it's a coil encircling a magnet such that current through the coil makes the coil rotate, and the needle is affixed to the coil. Deflection is in proportion to the average current throuhg the coil. It only reads DC because the average value of AC is zero...
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Galvanometer
http://www.engineersedge.com/instrumentation/electrical_meters_measurement/darsonval_movement.htm
To read AC there are a couple things one can do..
1. Insert a rectifier circuit to change the AC into DC for the D'arsonval movement...
2. Use a different movement such as "iron vane" or sometimes known as "Moving Iron", , which is basically an AC electromagnet that tugs the needle around. It'll read both AC and DC...
There's a very basic explanation here:
http://www.engineersedge.com/instru...ers_measurement/moving_iron_vane_movement.htm
and here :
http://www.allaboutcircuits.com/vol_2/chpt_12/1.html
Search on images for the Daesonval and Iron Vane movements returns tons of hits.
Here's a catalog from the folks who make the meters in my plant: Caution it's 4 meg, so if you're on dialup better plan ahead...
http://www.weschler.com/_upload/sitepdfs/analogmeters/analog_catalog_(westinghouse_styles).pdf
as you see meters are really interesting. Pf'er dlgoff has a collection of nice old ones... see "Beauty of old measuring devices" thread...
I hope this gets you started.
old jim