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Inexpensive volt/ohm meter you like? - Printable Version

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Inexpensive volt/ohm meter you like? - deckeda - 09-22-2021

My cheap Gardner-Bender might be dead. Turns on but does not read any values even though it’s digital. I suppose leads could be bad though. Absent an ohm meter (duh) I’ll see if I can swap them into a circuit somewhere and test continuity that way.

Can’t afford Fluke or whatever. I’ll continue to diagnose, including a new battery and leads meanwhile.


Re: Inexpensive volt/ohm meter you like? - cbelt3 - 09-22-2021

swap out the battery with a new one ?
Honestly my 40 year old Fluke is still my go to meter.


Re: Inexpensive volt/ohm meter you like? - Bernie - 09-22-2021

Put it in the Ohms mode and jam a paper clip or needle nose where the Leads go.

Or take one lead at a time and do this. The odds of both leads being bad ..... I am betting on the black lead being bad.

Get back to us.

Confusedmiley-signs003:


Re: Inexpensive volt/ohm meter you like? - deckeda - 09-22-2021

I don't yet have another battery for it. It uses a 9v.

Bernie wrote:
Put it in the Ohms mode and jam a paper clip or needle nose where the Leads go.

Or take one lead at a time and do this. The odds of both leads being bad ..... I am betting on the black lead being bad.

Get back to us.

Confusedmiley-signs003:

Did that. Both leads OK and the display zeros out as it should.

Put it in DC volts mode to test a known-good and charged 18V drill battery. It briefly reads about 19 volts and then just shows 0 volts.

But that may just be the battery's BMS shutting down the battery if it thinks the voltmeter is a foreign entity. In a little while I may go outside and see if it'll read a car battery.

ANOTHER drill battery test is what started all this, so I suppose that might not be possible here. That battery shows 0 volts too, even though a simple test light will light up on it.


Re: Inexpensive volt/ohm meter you like? - Bernie - 09-22-2021

I would try an AA 1.5 volt over the 400 amp car battery.

Even an A/C wall socket will shake you loose but a D/C Car battery is not something I would do with a FAULTY meter.

:oldfogey:


Re: Inexpensive volt/ohm meter you like? - testcase - 09-22-2021

A while ago, I picked up an Amprobe-320 Clamp Meter on the recommendation of an engineer friend when I saw a great deal on it. I believe the MSRP was ~ $300 (regularly found on sale ~ $200). It's WAY overkill for what I need but, at $125, I pulled the trigger. Amprobe is Fluke's "bargain line" of instruments.

https://www.amprobe.com/product/amp-320/


Re: Inexpensive volt/ohm meter you like? - deckeda - 09-22-2021

Bernie wrote:
I would try an AA 1.5 volt over the 400 amp car battery.

Even an A/C wall socket will shake you loose but a D/C Car battery is not something I would do with a FAULTY meter.

:oldfogey:

Good point. And besides, if this thing can't read down to a few volts it's no good to me anyway.


deckeda wrote:

But that may just be the battery's BMS shutting down the battery if it thinks the voltmeter is a foreign entity. .

That was the issue. This meter can't test batteries with a BMS controlling them. I grabbed a fresh AA Duracell and it reads 1.58v just fine.

"IT'S FIXED"

Thanks all. I guess the fancy probe types will have to wait another day.


Re: Inexpensive volt/ohm meter you like? - Cary - 09-22-2021

Bernie wrote:
I would try an AA 1.5 volt over the 400 amp car battery.

Even an A/C wall socket will shake you loose but a D/C Car battery is not something I would do with a FAULTY meter.

:oldfogey:

I don't really understand this statement. An AC line voltage wall socket has the potential to kill you.

A 12v DC car battery? You can grab the leads with your bare hands standing in a puddle of water, and nothing will happen.

If you're talking about high voltage EV or hybrid batteries, or the ignition coil output, that's a different story.


Re: Inexpensive volt/ohm meter you like? - freeradical - 09-23-2021

Cary wrote:
[quote=Bernie]
I would try an AA 1.5 volt over the 400 amp car battery.

Even an A/C wall socket will shake you loose but a D/C Car battery is not something I would do with a FAULTY meter.

:oldfogey:

I don't really understand this statement. An AC line voltage wall socket has the potential to kill you.

A 12v DC car battery? You can grab the leads with your bare hands standing in a puddle of water, and nothing will happen.

If you're talking about high voltage EV or hybrid batteries, or the ignition coil output, that's a different story.

Automobile batteries can provide lots of current. I knew a guy who was installing a second battery in parallel in is his VW Bug who failed to take his wedding band off. His wrench touched ground, and the inner surface of his wedding band was momentarily molten metal. He got lucky and got to keep the finger.

I used to work on comm systems with 48 volt station battery. The 4 rectifiers in parallel could supply 800 amps continuously, and 1200 amps momentarily. The cables that ran to the batteries were as big around as your wrist. A guy I worked with accidentally touched ground with a very large screwdriver (the shaft was at least as big as your pinkie finger) that was touching -48 volts. The screwdriver exploded, and the room went white with the flash. Luckily, nobody was injured or died.


Re: Inexpensive volt/ohm meter you like? - Cary - 09-23-2021

freeradical wrote:
[quote=Cary]
[quote=Bernie]
I would try an AA 1.5 volt over the 400 amp car battery.

Even an A/C wall socket will shake you loose but a D/C Car battery is not something I would do with a FAULTY meter.

:oldfogey:

I don't really understand this statement. An AC line voltage wall socket has the potential to kill you.

A 12v DC car battery? You can grab the leads with your bare hands standing in a puddle of water, and nothing will happen.


If you're talking about high voltage EV or hybrid batteries, or the ignition coil output, that's a different story.

Automobile batteries can provide lots of current. I knew a guy who was installing a second battery in parallel in is his VW Bug who failed to take his wedding band off. His wrench touched ground, and the inner surface of his wedding band was momentarily molten metal. He got lucky and got to keep the finger.

I used to work on comm systems with 48 volt station battery. The 4 rectifiers in parallel could supply 800 amps continuously, and 1200 amps momentarily. The cables that ran to the batteries were as big around as your wrist. A guy I worked with accidentally touched ground with a very large screwdriver (the shaft was at least as big as your pinkie finger) that was touching -48 volts. The screwdriver exploded, and the room went white with the flash. Luckily, nobody was injured or died.
Sure, if you have a dead short across the car battery, bad things happen. Using the car battery as a test load for a DVM is not in that category.

If car batteries were that dangerous, the millions installed in cars would have much more insulation (a la hybrid battery packs with multiple safety interrupts and requirements for specific gloves and equipment) installed. Most cars have batteries with both terminals exposed.

You have to work really hard to have problems with a car battery.