Oh goody, the God of metrology chimes in in our discussion of sub $30 devices.
A responsible capacitor manufacturer always accompanies its products with a technical description and characteristics, which also indicate the ESR or Z .. blah, blah, blah...
Yet, three different top end LCR meters WILL measure a given capacitor differently even when the measurements are done to spec. Prove me wrong. You are lucky if you end up with agreement within 10%-15%
Besides, measurement of ESR should ideally be done based on application, not spec sheets. At best they are a guide. ESR is dependant on voltage, frequency, temperature and the color of your great aunt's underwear. If you need a specific limit on the ESR of a capacitor, it should tested against the conditions of the application.
No, it does not MEASURE ESR, but only SHOWS some result on the display. These toys cannot measure ESR by definition and due to their hardware.
By what definition? (word salad alert) Yes, blah, blah, blah ...
Get off your high horse here! We are talking about things that cost $30 or less. We're not talking about a Keysight E4980A here so trying to compare these things to something like that is truly
expounding nonsense. Not everyone can afford an E4980A, and that's a cheapie in the Keysight lineup. And if you are looking for one of these $30 devices to give $30,000 results, your an idiot.
So, let's compare McDonald's burger patties to Kobe beef tenderloin next. Make sense?
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