I bought this meter defect (USD 50 + three times as much in shipping) out of curiosity and - more importantly - because I wanted a commercially made REFAMP type voltage reference based on SZA263 or LTFLU-1. I have fixed the meter (tantalum syndrome).
It is quite stable (as far as I am able to determine by using the best of my HP 34401A / 34970A / 3456A for comparison). So to me it is absolutely a keeper - a bit odd or almost weird both in user interface and construction / looks, but definitely worth studying and using. I will only use the 10v DC range, 6.5 digits and 7.5 digits average mode.
My first question that I am totally unable to answer myself, is that I suspect the ADC (discrete analog build + microcontroller) of having "missing codes". And I think that the phenomenon even turns up in average mode (which IMO hardly should be possible if the mode is software averaging).
The plot below is 2000 samples over 3.5 hours at constant temperature of a LM399. The samples are 7.5 digit average mode. My Python skills are non-existent but I managed to get descriptive statistics for the data:
count 2000.000000
mean 9.999909
std 0.000002
25% 9.999907
50% 9.999908
75% 9.999910
min 9.999905
max 9.999924 [outlier - my comment]
There is an outlier - a single one with (to me) unknown cause - but all the other 1999 points lie between 9.999905 and 9.999912. That is a span of 7 microvolt or 0.7ppm of 10v.
All values from 9.999905 to 9.999912 are sampled except there are no samples of 9.999908. Should this be possible with SW averaging? Does it point to long time HW "averaging"?
Before I read the manual one more time, I would like to hear if anyone has an opinion on this plot or any other interesting thing about this meter.
Hey - it's a Fluke
[And it was USD 3500+ in 1989. It is amazing how things change ...]