An electrically operated recording measuring instrument burns out the trace of a curve on a moving record medium coated on both sides with an evaporated metal layer. The power supply for the burnout current also feeds an auxiliary writing member for burning out an additional trace to isolate an area of the metal layer under the curve and, if desired, to subdivide the area in a similar way. The power supply also furnishes a higher voltage to a test probe for burning out any remaining conducting bridges across the burnout traces before capacitance measurements are made which can read directly in terms of area or relative area. The method and apparatus are particularly usable for photoelectrically evaluating blood samples treated by electrophoresis to separate the proteins.
A method and apparatus for testing circuit boards using two or a small number of probes for making resistive and radio frequency impedance measurements e.g. capacitive measurements. The combination of resistive and impedance measurements substantially reduces the number of tests required to verify the integrity of a circuit board. The impedance or capacitive "norm" values used in testing the circuit boards can be obtained by operating the system in a learning mode. Analysis of the data provides not only fault detection but also can indicate approximate fault location.