Hertz is the unit for 1 cycle per second.
So you should know the diameter and how long it takes for 1 cycle.
Disconnect and take the meter out. If it is a 120V meter, just connect it to a lamp cord and plug it in. If it still doesn't register, you have a dead meter. Sometimes they get stuck...you can tap on the face gently if nothing else works. Oh, and BE CAREFUL with that high voltage!!!
None of those three units is arithmetically related to the meter.
Units for Frequency are Hertz (Hz) Hertz is also known as s-1 (1/seconds) There is no distance component (meters) in frequency, only a "time" component
They aren't comparable. "Meter" is a length, while "Hertz" is a frequency.
Frequency is measured in Hertz, not metres per second.
y • x hertz
The metric units for wavelength are meters (m) and for frequency are Hertz (Hz).
You simply can't convert between totally unrelated types of measurements.
A wave travels an average distance of 1 meter in 1 second with a frequency of 1 hertz Its amplitude is that there is not enough information to say. A 60 vibration per second wave travels 30 meters in 1 second, its frequency is 60 hertz and it travels 30 meters per second.
"Frequency" is described with the unit "Hertz". 1 Hertz = 1 per second. Wavelength can be described with any unit of length. "Meter" is the most common choice.
Hertz is the unit of frequency and meter the unit of length. Frequency is the number of occurrences of a repeating event per unit time. Length is a measurement of distance or dimension.
You can check glow plugs with an ohm meter. should be <1ohm