Specmaster has a P.O.TEL. one, would that make it younger than the P.O. one on "richardsradios"?
Edit: Specmaster will soon have...
Haha, no specmaster won’t soon have unless I can cut a deal and it works. These have a higher accuracy than the Avo 8’s with DC being down to 1%
Just imagine how accurate it could be, with a digital display instead!
Glad you said "could be" too many people blindly trust a digital display. I used to do a lesson with an AVO 8 MkII, AVO DA116 (3.5 DMM in AVO 8 style case) and a PP3 "9V" battery. There was also a 41/2 digit Fluke 8060A and manuals for each meter next to me that I did not mention. students had to meaure battery with both and draw conclusions.
As the AVO 8 said 8.4V and the DA116 said 9.05V (typical values), All responded that the digital meter was more accurate.
The reality of course is that the 8 MkII is specified to 1% for readings over 50% FSD so "9V" is accurae to 0.09V. and the the DA116 is 0.5% of reading +- 1 count at 20 Deg C so is in theory more accurate. But in practice a 8 MkII 10 years out of cal will be better than a DA116 10 years out of cal. What the students missed was that both the meters should have been within about 0.15V of each other not nearly 0.5V different. They ASSUMED the 8 Mk II was about 5% inaccurate. In fact the "9V"batery was a rechargable ni-cad with 7 cells, 8.4V and marked as such. The DA116 hd been deliberately adjusted to read high (and had a "DO NOT USE" label on it)
Very few stucents ever spotted the 8.4V battery or asked to see the manuals or use the Fluke for confirmation.
A particular issue with digital meters is AC accuracy away from 50/60Hz. The DA116 is 1% +- counts at 50/60Hz, the 8 MKII is 2.25% BUT is good for 25 to 2000Hz. This means that for work on aircraft sytems at 400Hz the 8 mkII is more accurate and the DA116 completely out of scope.
This is also true of modern lower end Flukes. I saved a suppler from having to re-do two days of acceptance testing on a bit of kit because I was witnessing the test and spotted they were using a Fluke 75 which was not as accurate as the test limit at the frequencies in use. It transpired that they had used the same meter for another test on the same kit. Fortunatly voltage was not as critical for that test (5 days in the lab) and the meter had been calibrated only a week before with full report nd no adjustment so we let them do a special calibration check on AC at 60Hz (test in USA) and the frequencie in the test. Fortunatly it all matched and was good enough for that test.
Digital is not automatically better!