You made very nice video. Excellent editing. Really, really nice video work.
But there are technical inaccuracies, and general approach makes it feel like a heavy commercial (meaning biased) for the AVO835, despite you mentioning bad and good stuff.
It is kinda obvious you are really enthusiastic about the meter. It's OK for you to be, but it shouldn't show that much :-)
I will just throw in few comments, hope you don't mind:
- What is "Vibrant display"? Isn't it bog standard good quality backlight white LCD, same as on Brymen and many other meters nowadays?
- In datasheet nowhere is mentioned that meter measures inductance. Does it or does it not?
- Kudos for mentioning crap probes.. You should have mentioned that good gold plated probes are Brymen, and that they come even with Brymens that cost 3x less.
- For input protection, I agree with Joe, MOVs look kinda smallish. But it's all speculation unless it's tested.
- 0,1% in DC is OK, not excellent. Excellent is 0,05 or 0,02%. Also in AC, it is worse than 75€ Brymen BM236R (AVO is 1% best, 239R is 0,7% best). It is electrician meter, AC is kinda primary function.
- Meter is missing uA range.
- Designed in UK is not a thing to us. Rest of the world don't care. Don't get it the wrong way, you should be proud of your heritage, it is OK for you, but we really don't find it important.
Also, datasheet is really vague, there is no detail specs of ranges. If you don't understand what I mean, compare to Fluke, Gossen, Brymen, Uni-T spec sheets.
Meter actually has nice feature mix, and if it has CAT ratings independently verified by a test lab (like TUV) it might be a nice thing for the electricians.
But until that front end is really tested I personally wouldn't pay Brymen BM869S money for it. Maybe 100-120€.
Again, impressive video skills, video concept is great, it would be great if you keep on going doing this. You definitely have lots of talent for this.
Regards,