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| Old Fluke Multimeters |
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| Fungus:
--- Quote from: MarkKn on July 31, 2022, 09:16:44 pm ---...that foam contact matrix or mesh or whatever it is. --- End quote --- "Elastomeric connector", aka "Zebra strip". The Fluke 37 is definitely the coolest meter ever. |
| BillyO:
My 8024B died an ugly death recently but my 8010A is still working great. It's accuracy is astonishing. It agrees 100% (to limit of resolution) to my newly calibrated Siglent SDM3055X and my Brymen 786.. The 8024B was not as accurate, but I miss it nonetheless. Yeah, these old Flukes stand the test of time for sure. |
| Paceguy:
I have numerous Fluke multimeters, but some of my favorites are the 8100A and 8200A. Nixie tube displays are interesting. |
| cdrat:
I have a 1986 8060A that I am recapping and I noticed that the capacitor C19 was put in backwards. I have attached the photograph as received and after I removed it to show the "+" sign. Photos Below. Then I saw this post"https://www.eevblog.com/forum/testgear/fluke-8060a-repair-doa-meter-brought-back-to-life-pictures/ And I realized that I was not alone. Same exact yellow capacitor, installed "backwards". I checked the original capacitor (which was still OK, and the stripe does denote negative) Other photos (like from Mr ModemHead) show the capacitor in the correct orientation. http://mrmodemhead.com/blog/fluke-8060a-repair/ I am in the middle of recapping this and using the "wrong" "as received" orientation. Soaking in IPA now for refurbishing tomorrow. I checked the schematic and it reflects the orientation printed on the board. This is part of the TRMS Converter which is not on the later versions. Anyone know anything about this? |
| yo0:
I have 3 fluke dmms 8010a, 8012a and 8050a, all working good in all functions except diodes check, all show higher than normal readings, any idea? All with 1n4148 under test. Best regards. Pio |
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