BrokewrenchLS1
Well-known member
from what i understand, normally when a DMM goes bang, it is the first pop when the fuses blow, this is what will get you. obviously anyone holding it is going to drop it after that point. one reason its not good to strap them to your arm i guess. and this scenario would also be much more likely with alligator clip leads.
wouldnt it be the current they held to it that smoked it? popping the fuse and arcing across internals smoking shunts etc..?
Not all DMMs are fused, which can lead to some issues. You can have a high current, but with low voltage you're not likely to see arcing across components; conversely, high voltage with very low current can easily arc.
Having blown a couple Extechs and one Fluke up (Fluke was repaired, Extechs went in the trash, I know exceeding the current rating when doing current draw tests popped the fuse on the Fluke, and that was it. No fuse, no current path, non-hazardous situation. Even if you left everything hooked up, nothing would happen after the fuse blew. The Fluke (87V) had an internal fuse that could be replaced; the Extechs just fried board components and smelled like ***. Neither did anything catastrophic - the Fluke just stopped reading current, and the Extech meters made a bit of a sizzling noise and died.
Having said that, the highest voltage I work with is 480Vac - I'm sure working with higher mains voltages is a completely different scenario, and equipment to work with over 600Vac and 1000Vac fall into a different safety testing and certification category than the average DMM most anyone would be using. I've never used one, so no input on that.