Not sure if there is already something on this. I did search but the forum is huge. If this is an old hat, apologies.
This was prompted by a couple of recent reviews I did on KAIWEETS multimeters and also by Joe's current review of the Keysight U1282a in his multimeter robustness testing series
https://www.eevblog.com/forum/testgear/hear-kitty-kitty-kitty-nope-not-that-kind-of-cat/ in particular about the automated way of testing battery life by reducing voltage until a drop in current shows that the meter has shutdown.
My points are:
- One should not assume that a multimeter only draws DC current. I found a couple that have DC-2-DC converters inside without much input filtering that superimpose a significant AC current on top of the DC.
- If you do check for an AC current component, use a meter with high bandwidth because the switching frequency can easily exceed the 1 kHz AC limit of many standard multimeters.
- When the “low-bat” indicator comes on, the batteries should be considered finished. Relying on the sudden current drop when a meter finally shuts down doesn’t mean it can still produce accurate measurements in the range from when low-bat comes on to when it shuts down. For low battery tests, the meter should be set to measure some known constant value and the test must check that the measurement is still accurate.
BTW, I do have a lot of data on KAIWEETS multimeters because they keep sending me meters for review on my YouTube channel. That is very brave from them because I do check them quite thoroughly and exposed weaknesses in each of them. But they say they use it to improve their products which is a good thing.
To show what I mean:
Case1: The KAIWEETS ST120 draws nearly 3 times more AC current than DC from its batteryThe ST120 battery current tested with a Brymen 869s for example is around 8 mA DC from 2 AA cells. Moderately high for such a meter but understandable because it has a permanently on backlight. But there is an additional AC current of more than 20 mA on top. Together that is more than 22mA, eating batteries a lot quicker than what a simple DC measurement lead you to expect.
That current is at a frequency of about 2.3 kHz which means that many cheaper multimeters like the OWON XDM1041 can’t measure it properly. In the picture, the OWON shows only about 14mA AC
Case2: KAIWEETS KM601 loses accuracy when run at below low-bat voltagesThat meter shows the other problem. It used 3 AAA so its nominal voltage is 4.5V and low bat comes on at about 3.56V. In this test it displays a constant 5V voltage. The first picture shows it just slightly below low-bat with the correct (for this class of meter) readout.
The second picture shows it at 2.85V battery voltage just before it dies. The readout is has dropped by 10mV.
For this meter the low-bat indicator really means you should stop using it and replace the batteries.