That 199 appears to be in great condition. Does it happen to have a scanner card in it? That'd be a bonus.
I like these old Keithley DMMs with the big LED displays. I have a 196.
Will check, thanks.... what does that do?
It enables you to connect the meter to multiple measurement points and sample them sequentially. It's a trade off between the cost and space of using multiple meters to see everything vs. just one meter and not being able to see multiple measurements simultaneously.
There can be setbacks though. For example, on the Prema 6001 the presence of the scanner card limits you to 100V and you can't remove it without recalibration.
The recalibration requirement might be because of the contact resistance of the relays vs without the card.
Here's the manual for the 199. See the table, "Model 1992 Scanner Option" on page 6. Max voltage on the card is 200V peak vs 425V directly on the DMM.
https://www.manualslib.com/manual/1214565/Keithley-199.html?page=6
Thanks for the info guys... on the 199 the card works a bit different i think,
Not sure the 199 is effected that much, with or without the card.
Think this is because of the fact that on the 199, the scanner card seems only a bunch of relays... (i had a 30 sec. look in the manual i could be wrong, and have not opened it)
you need to feed-back yourself, from the relays to the terminals in the BACK.. that means to me, the signal by default on this 199 does not go trough the relays..
so with or without the scannercard the FRONT terminals should not be affected in any way by the card, maybe the terminals on the BACK becouse there will be a slight difference if you messeure direct on the back terminal or go trough the scanner-card...
[edit] the 200 volt limit would be the relays..
That prema 6001 looks very cool btw.. like the dotted display!