A triplet of 23s, Fluke 23’s that is
So I happen to have 3 very similar meters with me at the moment so I thought I would pull them apart and compare. Techincally I don’t have 3 23’s. I have a 23, a 73-III which I think is the gray version of the 23-II and a 23-III.
The teardown of the three is quite interesting. The 23-I is to the best of my knowledge the original version of the little boxy meter that was the 2x and 7x series. This 23 appears to have been made around 1992. The style of circuit board is similar to what I’ve seen in old Fluke 87s. The routing and edges feel crude compared to the later Fluke stuff. Still, the layout is remarkably clean and tidy.
The 23-III is only 7 years newer yet two generations removed. Again the layout is very clean with what appear to be only a few components. At least we are seeing a real collection of surface mount devices. We also see a Fluke IC that looks familiar to the older meters. All three of these have the 683052 IC running the show.
The 73-III of course isn’t quite a 23 but close enough. This one was purchased new around 2002. That means the replacement series (the 23-3 and 7x siblings) were already on the market yet Fluke sold this older model. Perhaps just as well. In a number of ways this is the best of the bunch. All three have basically the same specs and features but the small differences mater. Touch Hold, one of my favorite Fluke features, can’t be easily accessed with the old 23. You have to turn the meter on while holding the single button. Not at all a convenient way to access the feature. Also the bar graph doesn’t update when the display is held. On the newer meters this isn’t an issue. So even though I like the yellow it would be the first to go.
The 23-III works nicely and having an actual hold button is better than the 2 second press and hold. However, the yellow over mold just doesn’t protect like the cases of the older meters. It’s harder to clean too.
Still, note all the shielding inside of the 23-3. That’s a lot of plastic that people will normally never see.
The 73-III vs 23 is interesting because the two box meters are almost the same on the inside. The newer meter’s circuit board is cleaner and they added some new routing and plastic walls since the first meter.
With all three of these apart I started thinking about just how simple Flukes look on the inside. It’s like they were designed by mechanical engineers. There are lots of plastic shields and walls but seemingly few components. If you take apart a meter from one of the other companies it seems full of various electrical bits. Fluke makes it look like there meters have nothing but protection parts and plus the screen and an IC. It makes them almost distinctive on the inside vs other meters. Quite nice even in Fluke’s cheap meters*
Saying cheap Fluke meter is like saying cheap Apple product. Even the low end Apple products are nice because well, low end Apple pricing is still pretty high end!