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| Best handheld dmm, at any price? |
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| coromonadalix:
not handheld eh ? |
| l84coffee:
I just purchased a 87-IV also. I do old radio restoration and other hobbyist electronics, now that I'm retired. I have a 179, which is great for minor electronic work and great for electrical. I was going to get a Keysight 1252B but decided even though I could afford one, it was more than I wanted to spend. I also considered the 87V but thought the 87IV was a better meter. |
| Fungus:
--- Quote from: Vtile on April 01, 2018, 06:22:16 pm ---Only for strong hands: HP 3458A. --- End quote --- Not sure that counts as "handheld". :o How about this? |
| PA4TIM:
Profitest ? I had a profitest in for repair. The selftest tests the relais according the display. Nice, it passed, strange because I had removed the relais.... :palm: For me portable enough, my wet dream the Keithley DMM7510, If I ever win the lottery I buy one. My main meter at this moment is the meter I trust above everything, my Keitley 2000. Ultrafast in everything, stable as a rock. (but but I love my Brymen 869s too) Are there really people who use the bargraph ? Must say that I have looked at the Hioki DT4282 when I bought the Brymen and if money was no option, I would have bought it. |
| Terry01:
In my limited knowledge and experience I have found that 3 of my meters cover everything I need all doing different things better than the other. I could lose my 2 cheaper meters and still be covered all round but the other 3 all have a specific thing they excel at. I don't think there is a meter that does "everything" better than all others. If I was prepared to accept average results from a meter from the rest of my days then my Fluke 177 is the best "all rounder" that I have. If I need more accuracy, resolution or data logging or things like that then I have other meters that are "better". :-// |
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