DaveC said:
Portable use, true RMS, V-O-A, would like C & L but not necessary. Rugged
build would be nice.
"Meterman" (
http://www.metermantesttools.com/mmusen/home/default.htm) is
Fluke, I mean Philips, I mean... whoever owns them these day's own line of
inexpensive meters. I bought one for my brother, and it seems pretty nice.
I've had lots of cheap meters and a few Flukes, and so far the only one I ever
had die was a cheapie that lived in the trunk of a car for years on end. The
others have always been in heated indoor "lab" type environments, so I'd
suggest that in such situations you might as well shop by features & price
more so than a brand's reputation for ruggedness.
What I'm really trying to say here is that I don't think Fluke's are
necessarily a rip-off, just that for me I'm perfectly happy with something
that costs less. This reminds me of an article in some woodworking magazine I
read where a production cabinetry shop purchased a bunch of "prosumer" level
routers (Dewalt, Bosch, Makita, etc. from the likes of Home Depot) and tested
them to see how long they held up in a 24 hour a day, 7 day a week
continuous-use production capacity. The answer... not long! (Something like
a few months!) The experiment was to convince themselves that -- given their
particular situation -- the really high-priced routers they'd been purchasing
were indeed worth the premiums.
I own a Tektronix TX1 that seems pretty indestructable; I like it (although I
wish it would remember whether you were last measuring AC or DC when you
change it from voltage to, e.g., ohms and back -- it always defaults back to
AC!). I used to own a Fluke 87 and was annoyed that it suffered from the
then-common problem of the zebra strip separating from the LCD, thereby causes
various LCD segments to fail. A quick trip through a Panavise fixed it for
good... or at least until I sold it some time later.
---Joel Kolstad
P.S. -- Another pretty common question on here is what college students should
get for meters, and my response to them is also not to bother with a premium
brand until they're really figured out what features they like in a meter and
just how abusive they are with them.
P.P.S. -- They're really pretty awful, but you can buy a *lot* of those $2.99
Harbor Freight meters for the price of a Fluke...!