Currently reading:
Multimeter recommendations?

Discuss Multimeter recommendations? in the Gas Engineers Forum area at PlumbersForums.net

macka09

Plumbers Arms member
Plumber
Gas Engineer
Messages
1,226
Do I really need to spend £150 on a fluke for general fault finding?
 
All my testers read capacitance and other readings but then we work on oil burners so the added functions are ideal. As Murdoch says if you're only reading voltages, resistance and continuity etc you don't need to spend lots but it depends on what you're checking.
 
Do I really need to spend £150 on a fluke for general fault finding?
I bought a Fluke 116 about 10 yrs ago and it has been brilliant. Accurate, easy to use and covers almost everything you could need to check voltage, resistance, continuity , temp etc. As with all tools you can buy quality once, if you need too. Or just pick up a cheap equivalent if you don't think you will use it much.
 
I have an Extech which is pretty good, had minor issues with the battery compartment (think it was more to do with me) paid about £35 for it. I also have an Amprobe (fluke owned company) again it’s good, but what you might need to make sure of is the resistance value range - a certain baxi Spark generator coil resistance for instance has a resistance value of about 3M ohms, some multimeters like my Amprobe only go up to 2M ohms. Amprobe cost me £20 from eBay (new).
 
Last edited by a moderator:
Anything waterproof and in a rubber case, oh and a big display with backlight is handy if you’re approaching 50 a little quicker than you’d like.
ive got a basic fluke, cost about £90 maybe 5 years ago.
 
Do I really need to spend £150 on a fluke for general fault finding?
Fluke 116.
It will test AC/DC Voltages, LoZ, Ohms, temp (although not accurate on mine it will serve a purpose), capacitance, mV, uA, continuity etc. A lot of the things a Heating/HVAC engineer will need it for are covered with that.
I use a few other things too but it depends on the work you do.
The 116 is not cheap but I think it is worth every penny. When it finally fails, I wouldn't hesitate to buy another the same.
 
Sounds like for what you need any £10/£15 multimeter will do.
I wouldn't use meters at that end of the market for any voltages above about 30V. If you're using test equipment on mains voltages it needs to be capable of withstanding surges, have good quality insulation, etc. all of which add to the cost. My advice is to stick to good quality brands from reliable sources.
 
I wouldn't use meters at that end of the market for any voltages above about 30V. If you're using test equipment on mains voltages it needs to be capable of withstanding surges, have good quality insulation, etc. all of which add to the cost. My advice is to stick to good quality brands from reliable sources.
I’ve always been told not to use cheap electrical equipment due to the lack/quality of safety features. I’ve wanted to do the Baxi course for quite a while but can’t get in.
 
From what you said you wanted to use it for a cheapo will do it. Some people will tell you you should buy a Mercedes or go on holiday to Monaco, but I’ve had plenty of fun in the back of a cortina in Cromer!
 
I had one and I liked it. Excellent gear box. Plenty of space under the bonnet to work on it. Good clearance between valves and pistons so a snapped cam belt was a thirty minute repair that cost a tenner in parts.
CAM belt? none of the Cortina's I had even thought about a CAM belt, in fact they where not overhead cam except the Lotus variant I had the twin 40DCOE's did get in the way of the distributor cap though, showing my age I suppose.
 

Reply to Multimeter recommendations? in the Gas Engineers Forum area at PlumbersForums.net

Back
Top