I go to bed, and children in other time zones get in a fight right away..
Look, people. This topic is chock full of emotions and many hurried responses without doing homework.
So let's sumarize:
- Meters that do AC+DC type of measurements (combined) do that by keeping front end DC coupled.
- Meters SHOULD AC couple in AC only measurements so you could measure 20mV AC riding on top of 100V
- For some reason Brymen doesn't do that on AC mV range. That is NOT good way to do it.
- Because of that, if you plan to measure 20mV AC riding on top of 100V using mV range, on Brymen you have to use external capacitor. Like Joe said, just throw it in a box, if you do it on a regular basis.
- There are other meters that do the same thing as Brymen and also those that have AC mV range properly AC coupled. Make note that there is no instrument available that can measure in single AC+DC measurement (single or dual display) that can do mixed scales for AC and DC.
- Would I like that Brymen did it differently, so it also AC couples when AC only mV? Yes, of course I would. That is pretty much only thing they didn't do perfectly. On my BM869 I miss that and fact that it doesn't remember preferences between powerups.
- Is it a problem in practice? It might be annoying but not a problem if you know it. Would it be better if they did AC coupling? Yes.
- Overload indicator gets confused by DC offset overdrive only. AC overdrive without offset works perfectly. It will show OVL.
- Whole problem is caused by DC offset overloading input stages.
All of this applies only to dedicated mV AC measurements. Volt ranges properly AC couple and work perfectly.
At all times meter is safe and won't be damaged. Measurements won't be valid if operated outside operating envelope.
That is summary.