Me too. I have several stashed all over the place. They were free like the flashlights, a while back.
My main use is to see if the tractor battery needs charging when it hasn't been started for a month, and to evaluate flashlight batteries. They work fine for this. All readings match a more expensive meter I used to have.
I don't recall I've ever used the Ohms ranges for more than determining open/short in a circuit or light bulb, however.
Shawn, thanks! Where is that ad from?
I think the guy running the meter is more important then the brand of the meter.
Give a talented guy an HF meter and he will be fine. Give the wrong guy a top of the line Fluke and he still won't know his donkey from his elbow...
Me too. I have several stashed all over the place. They were free like the flashlights, a while back.
My main use is to see if the tractor battery needs charging when it hasn't been started for a month, and to evaluate flashlight batteries. They work fine for this. All readings match a more expensive meter I used to have.
I don't recall I've ever used the Ohms ranges for more than determining open/short in a circuit or light bulb, however.
Shawn, thanks! Where is that ad from?
You have a bad meter. Iv had 2 good ones for several years.Mone won't read anything. Tried it again to get a 12v reading on the wires going to the PTO. Nothing but 0's, no matter the setting or the test wires.
POS for sure, but it's been sitting for years. Maybe it worked at some point, but they sure don't last.