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Arduino Forum Looking for a Good Multimeter
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Related

Looking for a Good Multimeter

garythomas
garythomas over 7 years ago

I've been pouring over Amazon, looking for a good Digital Multi-meter.  I have a nice analog meter from the 70's (I bought it from Radio Shack when I was in my teens), but it does not measure capacitors.

I'm looking for something in the price range of 0 to $100.  If I have to go over I can. I found a few that were under $25 too. (you get what you pay for)

Lowes and Home Depot seem useless unless you want to use it on home wiring.

 

Almost every model they have has some kind of bad reviews. I know some people would complain about everything, so I thought I'd ask my find community here what you all use in your projects.

 

Thanks all

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Top Replies

  • luislabmo
    luislabmo over 7 years ago +6 suggested
    I think besides price point, what you expect to do with the multimeter is important to know. There are multimeters for electricians, HVAC, for pure electric engineers, etc. Also it'd be good to know the…
  • avnrdf
    avnrdf over 7 years ago +6 suggested
    What are you going to use your multimeter for? If you plan on using it anywhere around high voltages (home repair, troubleshooting/HVAC), you'll need a good one, as the cheap units usually skimp on input…
  • jadew
    jadew over 7 years ago +5 suggested
    If you want to use it on home wiring, then all the cheap ones are out of the question. This is probably a good place to start: https://www.youtube.com/user/EEVblog/search?query=multimeter If I had a budget…
Parents
  • jw0752
    0 jw0752 over 7 years ago

    Hi Gary,

    This is my favorite:

     

    image

     

    http://www.uni-trend.com/productsdetail_1964_1104_1104.html

     

    It is better than my Fluke 177 and cost just a little over $100.00 . The Chinese even shipped it for free.

     

    John

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  • mcb1
    0 mcb1 over 7 years ago in reply to jw0752

    It is better than my Fluke 177

    Depends on what you base the decision on.

    I see that it is labelled as Cat IV 600v, but I wonder if it has the certification to prove it. image

     

     

    Some time back (actually many years ago) I had Fluke meters and the boys I was working with used some cheap other thing.

    They couldn't understand why the voltage measurements they were taking were different  to when I took them.

    It turned out the analogue supply had some ripple and their meter was adding the ac component to the DC and giving them something else.

     

    While some would argue this was right, others would argue it wasn't because the device wasn't getting the required DC voltage.

    The Fluke showed the DC voltage and if you switched to AC it showed the ripple component.

     

    Shortly afterwards that guy went and brought a Fluke.

     

    I still have the Flukes, although I did manage to break one with a very high voltage and it's BER.

     

    So the original question was "What is the best Multimeter to Buy".

    my answer would be it depends on what you want to use it for as luislabmo pointed out/

     

     

    I would buy one of those component testers that measure capacitos, resistors, inductors and even transistors for $10? or so from the asian suppliers.

    This leaves you $90 odd dollars and even in NZD I counted 20 meters that might suit a general use (mostly Tenma which is element14).

    There are a lot under $50 as well, but you tend to start sacrificing the speed and digits.

     

    My motto is buy the most expensive tools you can afford, as they'll last longer, you'll look after them more, and while you only need them for this today, you never know tomorrows use.

    (by most expensive I'm not suggesting paying over the top for a name but features, safety, and longevity)

     

    Mark

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Reply
  • mcb1
    0 mcb1 over 7 years ago in reply to jw0752

    It is better than my Fluke 177

    Depends on what you base the decision on.

    I see that it is labelled as Cat IV 600v, but I wonder if it has the certification to prove it. image

     

     

    Some time back (actually many years ago) I had Fluke meters and the boys I was working with used some cheap other thing.

    They couldn't understand why the voltage measurements they were taking were different  to when I took them.

    It turned out the analogue supply had some ripple and their meter was adding the ac component to the DC and giving them something else.

     

    While some would argue this was right, others would argue it wasn't because the device wasn't getting the required DC voltage.

    The Fluke showed the DC voltage and if you switched to AC it showed the ripple component.

     

    Shortly afterwards that guy went and brought a Fluke.

     

    I still have the Flukes, although I did manage to break one with a very high voltage and it's BER.

     

    So the original question was "What is the best Multimeter to Buy".

    my answer would be it depends on what you want to use it for as luislabmo pointed out/

     

     

    I would buy one of those component testers that measure capacitos, resistors, inductors and even transistors for $10? or so from the asian suppliers.

    This leaves you $90 odd dollars and even in NZD I counted 20 meters that might suit a general use (mostly Tenma which is element14).

    There are a lot under $50 as well, but you tend to start sacrificing the speed and digits.

     

    My motto is buy the most expensive tools you can afford, as they'll last longer, you'll look after them more, and while you only need them for this today, you never know tomorrows use.

    (by most expensive I'm not suggesting paying over the top for a name but features, safety, and longevity)

     

    Mark

    • Cancel
    • Vote Up +5 Vote Down
    • Sign in to reply
    • Verify Answer
    • Reject Answer
    • Cancel
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