Been playing around with the LCR 1705 tweezers and I have to say that I'm a bit impressed and dismayed at the same time.
It features a rechargeable battery, charged via a supplied USB cable (A to mini 5) and takes around 120 minutes to reach full charge and is normally good for approx 20 hours of use with the backlight off. It comes with only a set of gold plated straight interchangeable tips pre-fitted while its sibling, the 1707 comes with a spare set of angled tips, might make reading the display slightly easier to read but I'll have to and source a set to put that to the test.
Has 4 test selectable test frequencies for use with inductor and capacitor testing, these being 100Hz, 120Hz, 1KHz and 10KHz while the 1707 model also has 100KHz to keep you RF boys happy?
It seems to be able to test components with a reasonable accuracy while they are in circuit which is a great and it has a claimed reading update time of 2.5 samples per second but it takes in practise around 4 seconds to decide (in auto mode) if the device your testing is an inductor or a cap and display a reading. To read and display a pure resistance seems to take between 5 and 6 seconds on average as opposed to 2 seconds on a fluke 8842A but I suppose it would work out to be better overall and might even be quicker in the long run when you don't need to look away from the DUT to read the display and thus less chance of slipping of the part being read?
Accuracy seems to be pretty good so as already mentioned, I'm pretty impressed with it but the biggest disappointment is that can't read the ESR of caps, I'll still need to lift a leg for that and use one of my other LCR/ESR testers for that function.
This is now a discontinued item by RS and I was able to snag this one on eBay new and sealed for £41 delivered
https://www.ebay.co.uk/itm/NEW-ISO-TECH-Smart-Tweezer-LCR-Tester-LCR-1705-T-M-J11-8659824/323632011397? Yes there are plenty of less expensive tweezers on there and a couple that are considerably more expensive so this I feel is a good middle of the road product and is ideal for the hobbiest, if I was making a living from it I would no doubt invest in the one of the more expensive tweezers as they can do the ESR and a bit more I believe from the get go.
EDIT:
The screen is also backlit although not visible in the photo, and this can be switched off. The manual reads as if it is on by default. but that is wrong, you have to give the power button a quick blip to turn it on/off.
EDIT 2
A big thank you to Kosmic for pointing out to me that these tweezers do infact support ESR but call it Rs and that function is only accessible via manual menu selection and when on comparable test frequencies, the results agree with the XJW01 so I'm a happy bunny.