Re: Killing multimeters...
spectacularly?
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Killing multimeters...
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Re: Killing multimeters...
Not even between the high current terminals...I wonder what caused that failure?
I think I threw out the dead resistors that I've replaced in my salvaged meters, but true, rather a dead resistor than a flaming meter.
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Re: Killing multimeters...
metal oxide everywhere - that must have gone up like a flare!
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Re: Killing multimeters...
Originally posted by stj View Postthe probe-cables are the fuse.
I was appalled when I opened the meter, the 10A range "daughter board" was connected to the main board by two solder bridges...
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Re: Killing multimeters...
TLDW...
How much damage from measuring 700VAC in the 10A current range?
Yes, the freebie/less than $6 HFT meter doesn't even have a fuse... though I don't think I want to even test my Fluke in current mode on 12VDC...
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Re: Killing multimeters...
Good video for all those who complain Fluke et al are expensive... cheaper than skin grafts!
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Re: Killing multimeters...
Fluke versus Harbor Freight multimeter at high voltage (about 5 minutes in): https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=OEoazQ1zuUM
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Re: Killing multimeters...
I have yet to drop a multimeter, or they have survived the drops...
Yes I did see that other post from Goontron alas I didn't want to derail his post with horror stories
The two meters that I burned fuses on are my two "worst" meters in terms of "user interface" - That is, it's not obvious from a distance what mode the meter is in. The 2A was in my Viz (and it's no wonder why RCA no longer makes meters) and the 500mA was in a HFT meter. If only that select switch was more clear what mode it's in, I've even left it on and killed its battery (and it uses those A23 batteries... ARGH!)
As for probes, the probes on my Fluke are indeed very good and don't know when if ever they'll break. My "more expensive" HFT meter (which is actually a Mastech) also has very decent probes, but the cheaper ones are indeed very crappy. Most have plastic wire, but the Fluke feels like rubber. The "more expensive" HFT almost feels rubbery but not quite...Last edited by eccerr0r; 11-22-2015, 11:18 AM.
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Re: Killing multimeters...
Never killed one but a cheap CHY 17 multimeter I forgot outside for a few days after having worked on my car.
It rained heavily on it, but after disassembly/cleaning and new battery it still works to this day
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Re: Killing multimeters...
I killed my last multimeter, a Craftsman $40 one with 400 amp clamp. Dropped it 12 feet onto concrete floor. Failed miserably as the clamp shattered internally. I replaced it with a $90 Southwire version from big blue. The amp clamp portion reads up to 400 amps both ac and dc. Great for checking alternator output current as well as volts.
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Re: Killing multimeters...
13 years ago my Voltcraft DMM died. Ever since I got Fluke and Agilent. 2 Years ago my then new (1 year old) U1253 Agilent DMM went crazy. Sent it back and got a brand new one with calibration. woot! None of the Fluke's have died, but one casing replaced.
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Re: Killing multimeters...
the few times a meter died on me it was the rotary switch.
my current one is starting to go, i feel a UNI-T coming soon!
probes/cables are another matter - they will go in one way or another.
you can pay anything from 1$ to 20$ for a basic probe/cable set or as much as 70$ for a full-kit from Keysite (Agilant)
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Re: Killing multimeters...
Haven't so far, luckily.
My cheap DSE meter (an 830 based model) did have self-destructing probes though.
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Re: Killing multimeters...
Originally posted by eccerr0r View PostSo how have you killed your multimeters?
https://www.badcaps.net/forum/showpo...39&postcount=1
I have never fried a meter or blown a fuse, but I have fixed a lot of meters and helped others online fix theirs after an "oops" moment.
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Re: Killing multimeters...
I have burned out fuses before (a 2A on my Viz and a 500mA on a pocket (not freebie) HFT meter), both due to leaving them in current mode when trying to measure low voltage DC. This is clearly a "fail" but the meters are still fine after replacing the fuses.
After rereading my post I guess it wasn't too clear, that Eico 555 I had posted a while ago I got it when someone abandoned it since it was broken. I don't know why I just could not think of how someone could burn that resistor until it somehow dawned on me how to do it.
The next thing that I had a "whudunit" situation when I rescued a vacuum tube voltmeter that had multiple failures. Two of which - a bad connection and a shorted probe jack - made sense (cold solder joint, and water/condensation) but the third one - a fried probe resistor - didn't. But that shorted probe jack and trying to measure a high voltage might actually explain how that resistor got fried...
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Re: Killing multimeters...
I've only killed two but the same way. Slipped probes when taking shunt plate current measurements on tube guitar amp output tubes. The milliamp scale doesn't like 400vdc. I learned and stopped doing it that way too.Last edited by SteveNielsen; 11-21-2015, 09:37 AM.
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