I am new to the forum, but I have been following this thread with interest. I purchased a MS5308 about a month ago. It failed after about 5 minutes of use and would not power up on good batteries. The eBay seller suggested trying just the AC adapter without the batteries. Bad move. The meter was replaced under RMA after a delay to hear from the manufacturer about the bad AC power supply and a recommendation to not use it. The second unit was DOA on batteries only. It makes a sound when the power button is pushed, but no display. I am awaiting a response from the seller.
I believe there is a power supply design issue on this unit. Has anyone reverse-engineered a schematic of the supply? A quick check shows what appear to be several linear regulators on board. One (U6) appears to be a 5V+ regulator, U5 may be a 3.3V+ regulator, but I was unable to get any info on the part #. Mine seems to be not regulating at 3.3V. Interestingly, if I apply about 7.5V to the battery input the meter power up and works fine. If the input voltage is raised toward 12 volts, the output of U5 starts DROPPING and the LCD dims and goes off. I suspect U5 may be blown, but what are the other two 3 terminal devices marked U3 and U4. They also appear to be 3 terminal linear regulators. If I remember correctly, U3's input is connected directly to the battery +. I wonder if they are using a virtual ground. Any thoughts? The chip set datasheet is fairly useless. No pin outs, no supply voltage requirements.
There was a comment on this thread about the 3.3V regulator having a 8V max input voltage. That would probably be correct if it is a LDO type. Can anyone check their working meter and seen what the input voltage to U5 is? That may be why these units seem to be failing. U5 is marked "32b2w" on my unit. I can't find anything on this device.
I am looking at alternative devices for a 3.3V regulator that can withstand a higher input voltage. The Seiko S-812C33SG has a 16V max input voltage and 100 mA current output. It is in a TO92 package though.