I had heard that Harbor Freight sells really cheap multimeters, and you get what you pay for, so I wondered just how bad could one be?
To find out, I bought a $4.99 meter, item 92020, a Cen-Tech 7-Function digital multimeter with backlight, as described here
http://www.harborfreight.com/7-function-digital-multimeter-92020.html I expected lousy build quality, lousy leads, and no input protection. This meter delivered on my expectations. But I wondered, is this thing OK for checking low energy voltages?
I set my power supply to 10.00 Volts, as measured by my Fluke 179 and Fluke 16. Their calibration has expired, but they agree to the last digit, so I'm confident they're not too far out. Out of the box, the Cen-Tech reads 10.09V, or about 1% off. That's good enough to do a lot of around-the-home diagnostics, even though it's not lab quality.
But my cheap meter is brand new with a brand new battery. What happens as the battery ages?
I powered the meter with a separate, completely isolated adjustable supply instead of its 9V battery, and start dialing the supply voltage down to see what happens, while the meter is trying to measure the test voltage of 10.00V
A perfect meter would consistently read 10.00V until it decided the battery was not sufficient, at which time it would stop reading. How close to perfect is the Cen-Tech?
At 9.0V supply, the meter reads 10.09V
At 8.0V supply, the meter reads 10.10V
at 7.1V supply, the meter reads 10.11V
At 7.0V supply, the meter reads 10.11V, but a rectangular icon that looks vaguely like a car battery shows up down in the corner of the display.
At 6.0V supply, the meter reads 10.56V, with the battery icon
At 5.0V supply, the meter reads 12.43V, with the battery icon
At 4.0V supply, the meter reads 15.13V, with the battery icon
At 3.3V supply, the meter reads 17.73V, with the battery icon
At 3.2V supply, the meter stops reading and the display goes blank.
As a contrast, I tried the same experiment with my Fluke 179. As I dialed the "battery" supply down, the measured voltage kept reading 10.00V until the battery was down to 5.3V. At that point, the display started reading "bATT", and no more numbers were shown. No matter how low the battery got, I couldn't get the Fluke to display a reading that varied even in the last digit.
So the Cen-Tech meter delivers only a bit worse than 1% error as long as you pay attention to that battery icon and know to stop using the meter and replace the battery as soon as that icon shows up. But if you don't understand what that rectangular icon means, your readings could be up to 77% over the actual voltage! Seeing a little picture of a battery doesn't necessarily trigger a sense of urgency if you haven't read the manual to know what that picture means. After all, some user might thing the designers could have put the picture of the battery there to indicate "battery ok", or "the meter is set to measure a battery".
If you're aware of the limitations, I suppose there are quite a few jobs you can do with this meter. Many diagnostic jobs I do don't need better than 5% accuracy, and I don't always work around circuits that have enough energy to hurt me. But the behavior as the battery voltage drops is a real trap for the inexperienced, and somehow I think they're the target market for this meter.
Of course, this isn't a full blown test. I'm sure the meter has other faults I haven't noticed yet.