Products > Test Equipment
Uni-T launches the UT117C multimeter
slavoy:
--- Quote from: kloetpatra on July 19, 2023, 01:42:40 pm ---
--- End quote ---
Apologies for going off-topic...may I ask what software did you use to create these charts?
BillyO:
.3% on a 60000 count meter? That's just silly. +/-180 counts? :palm:
I guess it's really just a 2.5 digit meter with cheap lipstick.
alm:
--- Quote from: BillyO on July 20, 2023, 06:18:36 pm ---.3% on a 60000 count meter? That's just silly. +/-180 counts? :palm:
--- End quote ---
I guess the advertising about a high-precision meter, as opposed to a high-accuracy meter, is correct. Unlike Siglent with their 6.5 digit meters that drift due to lack of selection and burn-in of their references :-DD
BillyO:
--- Quote from: alm on July 20, 2023, 07:31:45 pm ---I guess the advertising about a high-precision meter, as opposed to a high-accuracy meter, is correct. Unlike Siglent with their 6.5 digit meters that drift due to lack of selection and burn-in of their references :-DD
--- End quote ---
Can't say much about the SDM3065X but I just checked and my SDM3055 has not drifted in 6 months. Unless, of course, my calibrators have drifted by exactly the same amount as the meter on all the various ranges. :-//
ledtester:
Presumably the UT117C is designed to compete with the Fluke 117 and the spec sheet for the Fluke:
https://dam-assets.fluke.com/s3fs-public/flk-2793260b-en-117-extended-specs-ds-w.pdf
states that it is only a 0.5%+2 count meter for DC accuracy so in that regard the Uni-T is better.
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