You should be using old moving coil meter for 6 months and you would understand me well.
On those, OVL indicator was smoke coming from it...
Don't get me wrong, it would be nice if they could make completely foolproof meter.. But with good measurement practice that is not necessary.
Also good measurement practice takes into account your safety. Which always comes first.
Obviously I don't use the meter with starting on the millivolt scale, but things can happen in life (at least with me) which we don't foresee so I would be rather on the safe side when measuring something unknown, and be sure that the values around and above 500mV AC are also corect, and I don't have to worry that the reality is something entirely different. With a dual display, as I said it might won't be an issue as you could see on the DC or AC+DC value, that you are out of range but with the single display this might pose a problem. So this is just safety, like the fuses in your meter, which are also not supposed to be blown- at least regulary.
Joe:
Without zero crossing I meant an offset, so it is an assymetrical squarewave. Meter scale is at AC mV.
An example:Assymetrical squarewave duty cycle 50% p-p 5,28V average 2,52V max 5,12V min -160mV rms 3,55 V
AC V scale correct display: 2,5-2,7 V(STdev on Siglent) which is correct, mV scale: 650mV
Will add a scopeshot if needed later on.
At 1V p-p the meter measures about correctly(not 650mV) so I am not talking about it not meeting the specs, things start to happen if I go above the limit.
I don't have a signal gen, so I can't just test it with different offset levels. But within the 1V p-p including offset there seems to be no problem with the measurement. So the specifications are seemingly met.
I can not tell you what it does if I feed in the same signal without offset and raise it above the 1V p-p level, but it seems, that at least if I go above the specified limit with an assymetrical signal (which again I in a normal case obviously don't want to do, but could happen during a measurement) the AC mV scale does not show that it overranged, but stays like that at around 650mV and changes only minimally.
If I flip the leads it shows "OL" what should be the correct behaviour.
So with changed polarity I meant that the sqarewave is assymetrical signal starts almost at zero, and goes up to above 1V, positive, so the meter gets the signal with a given polarity, but if I flip the leads the meter gets the signal with the opposite polarity.