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General Purpose shop voltmeter

RickP330

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Apr 12, 2007
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831
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Middle Island, NY
Hey Gang,
I need a new-multi meter for my shop. don't feel like spending 300 bucks from the SO dude. Got any good suggestions?
RP
 
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malibu101

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Walnutport PA
Can I guess you're working on autos? DC power?

That IS a nice meter. I have, use, and fully reccomend Fluke also.

I'm picking out DC current measuring.
That meter causes you to make the meter part of the circuit to measure amperage. edit-that meter is 10 amps DC max. That IS the most accurate way to get a reading. HOWEVER it is the hardest way.
A clamp meter will make current measuring a WHOLE lot easier but with a very little loss in accuracy. Something such as a 336 that I use almost daily is nice.
OR look at a Fluke accesory such as a i410. It is an amp clamp that the meter you initally asked about can use.
Can you tell I like to just clamp on for amperage measuring? :)
 
Last edited:

malibu101

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Jul 1, 2005
Messages
3,908
Location
Walnutport PA
Hey Gang,
I need a new-multi meter for my shop. don't feel like spending 300 bucks from the SO dude. Got any good suggestions?
RP
Waht do you do in you shop? What do you need the meter for, roughly?

Yes, do NOT buy an SO meter. For the SO money, a Fluke is a much better value.
 

Lightning

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Apr 27, 2008
Messages
154
I have a cheap $80 Mastech multimeter but it works well for the work I do.
 
OP
R

RickP330

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Joined
Apr 12, 2007
Messages
831
Location
Middle Island, NY
Hey Guys,
It is for general auto and home use. I don't use it professionally and I won't be using it every day, but I do have an infrequent need for something better then a radio shack special. That said I will be using it on cars and home electric projects. (Ac and Dc)

Still that Fluke 77 is close to 250 bucks. can I do better with a cheaper one?
Rick
 

Lightning

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Joined
Apr 27, 2008
Messages
154
Hey Guys,
It is for general auto and home use. I don't use it professionally and I won't be using it every day, but I do have an infrequent need for something better then a radio shack special. That said I will be using it on cars and home electric projects. (Ac and Dc)

Still that Fluke 77 is close to 250 bucks. can I do better with a cheaper one?
Rick


If you are not using it every day, buy a cheaper brand. I decided to save some money and buy a cheap one because I do not use it all that often.
 

GDA

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Nov 19, 2006
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935
Location
Dallas, Texas
used Flukes do show up craigslist and ebay at a very nice discount too

I picked up a near new (but used) Blue Point multimeter very cheap this way
 
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malibu101

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Walnutport PA
Can you get accurate measurements without a Fluke? Well of course. You are not measuring brain signals. Any reasonably good meter will give you the accuracy you probably need. You must know (or at least have an idea) of what you need to measure.....
AC-DC-Volts-Amps(ac or dc it matters on amps, just like volts)-Resistance-Frequency
AND to what levels
12 volts or 480 volts-1 milliamp or 100 amps
Buy a meter that fits what you need it for, only you can answer that. A meter that does everything is more costly than one that just does a few simple tests.
Look around at products by Amprobe, Extech, Greenlee, Hoiki, UEI. Many "house brand" meters are just rebadged units from the above manufacturers.
 

Coach James

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Jun 24, 2005
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Location
Sandhills of North Carolina
"...brain signals..." LOL!!!

I have two Craftsmans that I got on sale for half price. Each one was $9.99. I bought five Sperry multi meters for my students to use, 210 and 350 models, and they work fine.

My dad still uses the analog meter he bought 20+ years ago.

Coach
 

Danglerb

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Sep 6, 2007
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Location
SoCal
HF has a Centech on sale for $3 from time to time, and a clamp style for about $8. Fluke is worth it if you use one a lot, but something simple and cheap is 100% better to have around than nothing.

Specifically for auto work I bought a Masstech pen dmm, and so far like it pretty well. Its handy to have the probe and display in the same spot.
 

malibu101

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Jul 1, 2005
Messages
3,908
Location
Walnutport PA
"...brain signals..." LOL!!!


My dad still uses the analog meter he bought 20+ years ago.

Coach
There is almost nothing wrong with a good old analog sweep dial.
Except

They (most analog I believe) are not "high impedance" meters.
A (I've never seen one that isn't) digital is high impedance meaning that the resistance of very high. It does not becomer part of the circuit. A low impedance D'Arsneval(sp?) movement can cause problems on microprocesor circuits like are found in automotive computer systems.
 
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