Products > Test Equipment

Best multimeter for my price range?

<< < (3/14) > >>

nctnico:

--- Quote from: Fungus on October 06, 2022, 10:23:28 am ---
--- Quote from: nctnico on October 06, 2022, 08:08:34 am ---If you want to measure mains / deadly voltages then get an A-brand like Fluke, Hioki, Keysight, etc

--- End quote ---

No Brymens?

--- End quote ---
Who is your family going to sue after you get fried to a crisp? How much does a 'brand' care about their reputation?

mwb1100:

--- Quote from: BlueApple on October 05, 2022, 10:07:56 pm ---
- EEVblog BM235


--- End quote ---

The BM235 is a good value for the money and I believe they are in the low end of the price range for meters that have been designed and built with safety in mind. That kind of build might not be as important if you only do electronics, but if it's ever going to touch mains you should have it.

I think Brymen meters are generally a good value.  If the BM235 does what you want, it would be a good buy.  The eevblog variant is $140 on Amazon (prime shipping), about $120 (shipped to the USA) from Dave, also about $120 from welectron.com (also shipped to the USA).  I think those are the only vendors other then ebay resellers that offer the eevblog version.

If you want to save a few dollars, welectron.com also offers the standard BM235 for about $100 shipped to the US.  I think that the only differences between the standard and eevblog BM235 are:

  - eevblog ships with very nice silicon probes, standard has PVC probes  (you can add the silicon probes for about $10)
  - eevblog has the blue casing, standard has a red casing

There are a lot of different Brymen models that are in the $100-150 range, so it might be worth checking several.  For example, some Brymens have a bar graph, but many don't (the BM235 doesn't).  Most (I think) have a 30 second timeout on the backlight - which drives me crazy, but some have backlight timeouts in the 10-15 minute range (BM235 has a long timeout).  Unfortunately, datasheets generally only mention whether or not there is a backlight at all.  To find out how long it stays on you usually have to grovel around in the manual.

Bymens are hard to find from US vendors, so check with welectron.com or tme.com in the EU.  Both have reasonable shipping charges to the US.  A nice advantage to buying from overseas is you'll avoid sales tax.  In most cases that'll offset the shipping from the EU.

(note: I'm not affiliated with Brymen, Welectron, or TME other than as a customer)

J-R:
The manual for the Fluke 80K-6 has a lot of good info: https://assets.fluke.com/manuals/80k6____iseng0600.pdf

bdunham7:

--- Quote from: mwb1100 on October 06, 2022, 07:42:08 pm ---Bymens are hard to find from US vendors, so check with welectron.com or tme.com in the EU.  Both have reasonable shipping charges to the US.  A nice advantage to buying from overseas is you'll avoid sales tax.  In most cases that'll offset the shipping from the EU.

--- End quote ---

If you order from Welectron do they take off the VAT as well? 

bdunham7:

--- Quote from: nctnico on October 06, 2022, 07:34:14 pm ---Who is your family going to sue after you get fried to a crisp? How much does a 'brand' care about their reputation?

--- End quote ---

For industrial three-phase, HVDC solar or some high energy physics experiment that is a valid concern.  For household mains use, at least in the US, not so much. 

Navigation

[0] Message Index

[#] Next page

[*] Previous page

There was an error while thanking
Thanking...
Go to full version
Powered by SMFPacks Advanced Attachments Uploader Mod