I bought a couple of Agilent U1232A DMMs and discovered a problem with them.
I had a D.C. motor connected to my power supply and I took one of the U1232A to measure the voltage across it's terminals, the measurements on the unit were moving between 13 and 14 volts, the voltage on the internal voltmeter on the power supply was stable at 12 volts.
Then I took my Fluke 87V and the measurement was stable at 12 volts, same with my ~20 years old BK Precision DMM. I tried a second power supply just to get the same results.
Then I connected my Agilent scope I saw that the signal was very noisy, set the voltage measurement on the scope and it was also stable at around 12 volts.
I was able to reproduce the problem using my signal generator by setting a dc component with a noise level, the Agilent multimeters start to fluctuate when setting the noise level greater than 15 volts, my Fluke and my old BK Precision no problem. Unfortunately I was not able to get the value where the Fluke or the BK precision start to fluctuate due limitations on my Sig Gen, the max noise level I can set is 18 volts.
I contacted Agilent explaining the problem and they asked me to replace the two units with new ones thinking they were defective, but the new multimeters have the same problem. The Agilent engineer told me it will be a difficult fix, if they are going to fix it, probably one customer complaining will not make any noise inside the company. I'm thinking if I will return the multimeters, the only reason I bought these cheap units was for the IR-USB connection to the computer.
I'm glad I have some other multimeters for comparison, imagine a person having just one of these, how can you rely on them !