I'm considering one of these meters, but I have a concern about one of its features not working properly, specifically the hold feature.
TRX Lab did a review of the SDM3045X some time ago. In it, he tested the hold feature in comparison with his Agilent U1272A handheld meter. The review of that feature starts here:
https://youtu.be/K09BLgyk9Hg?t=2005Now, the problem is that, for him, when there's nothing being tested, the meter will randomly believe that there's a sample that it needs to capture, with the end result being that, firstly, your real sample will not be held for long as it detects another bogus one, and secondly, the history of such samples will fill with bogus samples fairly quickly. This is with the meter in autoranging mode but that might not make any difference, and in any case that would be my primary use case.
My question is: has this issue been resolved in the current firmware? Seeing how Siglent didn't (and perhaps still doesn't) seem to be treating these meters as first class citizens, I'm reluctant to purchase any of these meters if functionality that I'd really want would still be in a broken state, since under those conditions I may as well just pay a few hundred more and get an Agilent 34461A and be done with it.
If, on the other hand, the basic features of the meter have been dealt with, then the price of these would make them quite compelling.
One other question: the SDM3045X is a 60K count meter. The SDM3055 is a 240K count meter. The SDM3045X seems to retain its significant digits at medium speed, whilst the SDM3055 loses a digit and becomes the equivalent of the SDM3045X under those conditions. My question is: what is the
count value of the SDM3055 when in medium speed mode? Is it still 240K counts, or is it 24K counts? If the latter, then the SDM3045X is actually better suited for my needs.