If Uni-T had official ties outside China, that would expose them to lawsuits for wrongful death or injuries attributable to failure to meet their safety rating claims if there has been any.
Well they sort of do. Uni-T meters are sold under the "Tenma" brand through Farnell/Element14 for example. If anyone knows if the Tenma variants are built safer I'd be interested to know.
I have checked the insides of my Voltcraft (Conrad) VC-940 a few times. I bought it maybe 4-5 years ago. Since Uni-Ts letter scheme is so confusing, I'm not sure, but I think this is the same meter as shown in Daves video (AC power measurement, 40,000 counts but no data logging [but working RS232 interface]). My unit is clearly better inside. By "better" I don't mean "good". No HRC fuses no MOVs (or only small MOVs), but no stupid screw holes in high current path (or any path I know of) and a proper TRMS circuit in a metal can. And only one 10-turn trimmer and differences in board layout.
I share the opinion that some Uni-T meters is quite good, but the 71-series is not among them. My VC 940 is prone to freezes, have terrible battery life (since I use it mainly for AC power measurement with logging I have hacked in a isolated DC-supply replacing the battery) and confusing to use in the menus.
As a AC power meter with True RMS it is quite decent (but, as Dave points out, it is only suitable for higher loads and when accuracy may not be the most important thing) and stable,
as long as the load is "nice". Loads with terrible power factor or fast, inductive changes, the meter clearly has some EMC issues and can freeze.
When I think about it, this is my second VC-940. The first one was DOA.
But I very much like my VC-820, an Uni-T UT60E I believe. A terrific little meter with optic RS232 and a battery that lasts for months or years (or weeks, if you run a datalogging experiment with the meter constantly on).
Another one is my "VC-1008" (yeah, all three is from Conrad) DMM/oscilloscope which of course is a joke as far as "oscilloscope" goes, but it does one thing very well (and thats what its for): oscilloscope function on
all (well, except ohms and cap range) ranges, including 10A-range. And this is mainly what I use it for, current measurements in the time domain.
So, mixed feeling about Uni-T. They are cheap, and you get what you pay for, but sometimes, just sometimes this is also exactly what you need. I really value my UT-60E/VC-820 (in contrast with Dave I really value PC-connectivity in my DMMs. Especially RS232 and with a documented protocol [no matter how retarded or overcomplicated. Uni-T meters actually sends strings with a "bitmap" relating to the display segments. Awful, but documented, so you can make your own software]).