Products > Test Equipment
Share Your HH Multimeter Situation
AVGresponding:
--- Quote from: mendip_discovery on April 03, 2023, 06:13:53 pm ---I think its like anything the correct number is n+1 where n is the number you currently have.
I must say its a poor show so far, with no AVO meters. tut tut
--- End quote ---
You didn't notice the AVO M801 in my pic?
shakalnokturn:
Thanks for the topic BillyO, I beleive we do have a bit of a "situation", it was a good excuse to realise I need more therapy, I found no hope in the TEA group...
Tried to keep this to the most conventional HH DMM form factor, leaving out the insulation testers, clamp meters and scopemeters. A poor little Fluke 21 got left out from the photo session.
M0HZH:
No pictures right now but from memory:
- Fluke 287
- Fluke 867B
- UNI-T UT61E
- UNI-T UT33C
- UNI-T UT210E
- Amprobe 5XP-A
- a few nonames like DT830 / XL-830 etc
I feel like a need a Brymen just because.
Gyro:
I just remembered that there is a 41 page pre-existing thread. Well worth a browse (if you ignore everything grey and yellow!)...
https://www.eevblog.com/forum/chat/show-your-multimeter!/
P.S. A lot of the image links have sadly disappeared, a good example of why it is important to upload them here.
alm:
I use just two handheld meters (Fluke 87 III and 189), and bench meters like the Keithley 199 or 2000 if I need more. For a continuity measurement, or a quick resistance / voltage measurement, I'll use handheld. But for anything where I'd need multiple, like monitoring outputs, power rails or power draw while testing something, I'll use a bench meter. I find it very hard to find space for multiple handhelds on my bench. I can't imagine setting up half a dozen handheld meters so you can see all their displays at the same time. A stack with bench meters together with power supplies, function generators etc works better for me.
Navigation
[0] Message Index
[#] Next page
[*] Previous page
Go to full version