Products > Test Equipment
bench multimeter for someone learning
MrYakimovYA:
--- Quote from: Fungus on March 26, 2023, 02:58:35 am ---Cheap, small, comes with warranty... :-//
--- End quote ---
And lightweight) I think you must hold it with arm when you are goint go push some button :)
Fungus:
--- Quote from: MrYakimovYA on March 26, 2023, 03:22:21 pm ---
--- Quote from: Fungus on March 26, 2023, 02:58:35 am ---Cheap, small, comes with warranty... :-//
--- End quote ---
And lightweight) I think you must hold it with arm when you are goint go push some button :)
--- End quote ---
Weight is easy to add... :popcorn:
Fungus:
(but really you'd probably put your hand on top and push buttons with your thumb. Pushing horizontally with an index finger isn't very ergonomic anyway)
alm:
--- Quote from: Fungus on March 26, 2023, 04:05:29 pm ---Weight is easy to add... :popcorn:
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So that's the genius of the VC8145's mechanical design: Lots of space to add weight :D
BeBuLamar:
--- Quote from: J-R on March 26, 2023, 01:55:02 am ---If the 34461A fan noise doesn't mesh with your other equipment, then a common mod is a Noctua fan. It doesn't impact the calibration from my testing. I used the 20mm thick one personally, and actually lowered the speed even a bit more to make it nearly silent.
The Fluke 45 has a serial port and Test Controller support (https://www.eevblog.com/forum/testgear/program-that-can-log-from-many-multimeters/), so that is somewhat compelling. No 4-wire or rear jacks, though.
Looking at the OP's other posts it seems they are mostly interested in the bleeding-edge cheap stuff, so I don't think the old pro gear is what they are looking for.
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I think that the OP is looking for bleeding edge but cheap stuff. I really think if someone is still learning a basic but professional grade meter is more useful even if it's fully manual.
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