Electro Fan
What do you mean by a fancy GUI? Do you need a multifunctional tester with working options or a beautiful interface?
Give an example of an upgraded k-firmware?
Hi indman,
Thanks for your reply. And thanks for all your good leadership on the LCR ESR Transistor checker project.
I’ve been following this thread for a long time and recently thought it might be time to see if there is some consensus on “a” or “the” preferred tester. Rather than reading all 250 plus pages I decided to read from the end to see if I could find some recent consensus. (After 7 years of this thread I’m guessing the answer is “it depends”, and that the testers keep evolving.)
My sense is that different users want different testers for different purposes, of course. Some might want an inexpensive versatile tester to get good enough measurements for various tests on various devices. Others might want a tester that is somewhat open source / modifiable to meet particular requirements or because they enjoy modifying test equipment. Others, like myself, might be interested primarily in the educational opportunities this class of testers (and test equipment) in general can provide.
In any event, on page 265 I saw a reply from madires to an inquiry by eti regarding the particular firmware on a particular device (I think a LCR-T4) in which madires said “That's a modified k-firmware with a fancy GUI.” – so I figured those might be somewhat definitive terms, but maybe they haven’t been officially confirmed terms.
In any event, armed with a descriptor of something that looked interesting I worked my way further back in the thread and was happy to find on page 261 a link to your good pdf summary. Nice work, thanks!
With these good breadcrumbs I then shelled out to eBay and found a bunch of alternatives including some GM328, GM328A, GM238A+, and LCR-T4. I’m not wedded to these models, whatever model make sense is cool. These are just some examples, they are nearly dart throws that happened to land somewhere in the vicinity of the target.
What I’m looking for is a device that tests a wide range of components (don’t even really care which exactly because at the prevailing prices if necessary 2 or 3 might fit in the budget). The main objective is to find one or more testers that provide a UI with schematic-like symbology to help tie the measured values to the internal circuitry and performance attributes of the DUT.
While it would be great to find a tester that does “everything” (measures many values for many devices) and that has highly accurate test results those are not my primary objectives. (Not to mention "does everything" and "with high accuracy" don't seem like reasonable asks for a $20 tester.) My preferred tester is a tester that will provide useful educational feedback about at least some popular devices (transistors, inductors, capacitors, resistors, etc.) and that helps tie the measured values to the particular device leads (especially for various types of transistors, of course). I have a couple Peak Atlas products and I find the symbolic plus measured value display, and the physical to logical (socket/lead) ties in their UIs to be helpful when studying (or trying to teach) the characteristics of DUTs.
Of course it would be nice if the tester had a decent case to hold the battery and DUT in place and knobs and buttons that fit human fingers, etc. but my primary interest is a highly informative user interface, especially the display. If there is such a device that comes to mind and it has the good house keeping seal of approval of the users in this thread that would be ideal as having access to the users here is almost as valuable (or more valuable) as the device itself.
Thanks in advance for any particular product recommendations or any other guidance.