| Products > Test Equipment |
| Looking for a multimeter with these functions |
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| KungFuJosh:
--- Quote from: tooki on September 30, 2024, 05:47:21 pm --- --- Quote from: tonycstech on September 30, 2024, 04:42:40 pm --- --- Quote from: KungFuJosh on September 30, 2024, 03:48:26 pm ---Sounds like OP needs a good Bench DMM, and to be sure he knows how to use it. --- End quote --- i already had siglent and some chinese brand bench meter. Same problem Returned both. --- End quote --- This isn’t a flaw in the test equipment, it’s an issue of incorrect expectations. You’re trying to use the tool for something it’s not meant for. Or rather, the measurement you want is nonsensical. --- End quote --- Or at least outside the specs of a bench DMM under $1000. What he wants sounds more like the combination of a $2000 DMM and a separate $5k to $11k LCR, and not testing in circuit. |
| tonycstech:
The issues is all the same across premium or bench top meters. Too much current/voltage measuring resistance. Need less. Need to be able to adjust that with the firmware. That will fix the "none existent" problem. While many of you engineers can argue about my lack of knowledge how electronics work (which i will not deny i have no clue how they work) it all comes down to one problem which is: 99.9% of all meters on this planet will measure 1.2K while 0.1% will measure 300ohms or if leads are reversed, 2.5k but no where near 1.2k. With that said, it is absolutely pointless to argue with 0.1% of earths population who are engineers because they are simply too smart to understand stupid problems that idiots like me bring up from time to time. Case closed. Solution: None Conclusion: Junk equipment is much more reliable when it comes to fixing high end electronics than high tech/high price equipment cant. I have nearly 100% success rate behind this statement. |
| J-R:
As I mentioned in the other thread, you can just use a bench power supply and set the voltage and current limits to whatever you want. No need to hunt excessively for a special DMM. I've also proven previously that even the cheapest power supply and DMM can very precisely measure low resistances using the Kelvin sensing method. Test Controller can perform math functions on multiple inputs, so you could have an Ohms display based on V/I: https://www.eevblog.com/forum/testgear/program-that-can-log-from-many-multimeters/ |
| tautech:
--- Quote from: tonycstech on September 30, 2024, 07:18:24 pm ---The issues is all the same across premium or bench top meters. Too much current/voltage measuring resistance. Need less. Need to be able to adjust that with the firmware. That will fix the "none existent" problem. While many of you engineers can argue about my lack of knowledge how electronics work (which i will not deny i have no clue how they work) it all comes down to one problem which is: 99.9% of all meters on this planet will measure 1.2K while 0.1% will measure 300ohms or if leads are reversed, 2.5k but no where near 1.2k. --- End quote --- Please explain. What are you trying to measure and in what modes ? |
| BeBuLamar:
How about a Uni-T 181? |
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