Nope some of us just don't run like this
Nope some of us just don't run like this
One reason they aren't around any more is there is no way you could get a CAT approval or rating for the things.
All we are pointing out is that people did use such meters safely for years
There are many example of intrinsically quite dangerous devices being safely used by huge numbers of people by the religious application of safety rules.
An outstanding case is that of chainsaws, where the last safety modification was about 40 years ago.
One reason they aren't around any more is there is no way you could get a CAT approval or rating for the things.
One reason they aren't around any more is there is no way you could get a CAT approval or rating for the things.
I'm not sure that's an intrinsic property.
They made them that way for the same reason they made cars without seatbelts or headrests, ie. they felt that real manly men didn't need such things..
Hows this folks. A 13.5 Kilo volt analogue meter.
https://www.test-meter.co.uk/metrohm-llt13-8-13-8kv-ac-live-line-test-kit/
All we are pointing out is that people did use such meters safely for years
We agree that they used them, we disagree on "safely".
There are many example of intrinsically quite dangerous devices being safely used by huge numbers of people by the religious application of safety rules.
An outstanding case is that of chainsaws, where the last safety modification was about 40 years ago.
Being a lumberjack is one of the most dangerous jobs in the world. They'll stop using chainsaws in a heartbeat if somebody comes up with an alternative.
Nope some of us just don't run like this
Hows this folks. A 13.5 Kilo volt analogue meter.
https://www.test-meter.co.uk/metrohm-llt13-8-13-8kv-ac-live-line-test-kit/This is a small 10 kV electrostatic voltmeters. I used in the past versions of this at 150 kV.
Here is a 50 kV analog. No batteries required.
https://www.ebay.com/itm/Sensitive-Research-Electrostatic-Voltmeter-model-ESH-
50KV-/381384872490
It is still an analogue instrument with a moving pointer that is for use on high energy circuits and is safe to use. There are people on this thread stating categorically that all analogue meters are unsafe for high power use, this is just not true.
All we are pointing out is that people did use such meters safely for years
We agree that they used them, we disagree on "safely".There are many example of intrinsically quite dangerous devices being safely used by huge numbers of people by the religious application of safety rules.
An outstanding case is that of chainsaws, where the last safety modification was about 40 years ago.
Being a lumberjack is one of the most dangerous jobs in the world. They'll stop using chainsaws in a heartbeat if somebody comes up with an alternative.
There are many example of intrinsically quite dangerous devices being safely used by huge numbers of people by the religious application of safety rules.
An outstanding case is that of chainsaws, where the last safety modification was about 40 years ago.
Another is cars, where the primary safety protection is conforming with the Road Rules.
Modern cars with all sorts of gadgets still crash.
Not a device, but humans have not changed in hundreds of millenia, so they have no new inbuilt safety features.
Despite this lack of safety features, & the very dangerous nature of ocean beach swimming, millions of people swim safely every year, due to the application of safety rules.
n support of vk6zgo I have no reservation in using my AVO 8 Mk5 for any HV work to the limit of its capabilities and have done so many times.(with only genuine AVO leads)
Analog multimeters are not safe at all, never use them on high energy circuits.....![]()
Again - this has nothing to do with them being analog... it is just because most of them come from pre-CAT rating era. They are not as safe as modern CAT rated DMM (or maybe rather I should write more unsafe), not because they are analog, but because of their construction.
Why should magneto-electric indicator be less safe than LCD or OLED display? This is just a kind of display.
I just simply can't agree with such statement, it is not logical. There is a lot of old DMMs which are equally unsafe, and there is a few modern analog multimeters, which meet CAT ratings. It's like you'd state "don't drive 2-stroke cars - they're dangerous". The fact of having 2-stroke engine doesn't make the car dangerous.
Interesting. I haven't seen a new design of professional (i.e. not the $5 kind) analogue multimeter for decades. Who makes them?
Interesting. I haven't seen a new design of professional (i.e. not the $5 kind) analogue multimeter for decades. Who makes them?
There are at least two: Simpson 260 Series 9S (see picture up in this same page)
Metrix MX1, both are rated 600 V CAT III
Who still buys that? The metrix MX1 cost 250 bucks and the Simpson more than 500 bucks ..... The price of one or two Brymen BM869 ... !!!
There is no match.....
How many of these 2 analog multimeters exist on the market? And how many other new and old analog multimeters that have no cat classification and no protection at all ?
For sure, these two multimeters do not represent one thousandth of all analog multimeters old and new still existing today.
