There are some new arrivals in the GWN, and some not so newly arrived but newly played with:
As you can see, there are some brand new Wera drivers on the bench.
They cost about as much as a car payment, including the VDL drivers beyond the needed torque screwdrivers.
Agreed. I got myself a Wera 2.5 to 11.5 lbs-in torque driver, because it was cheaper than the metric equivalent and I have lots of calculators (mostly without an = key)
Ditto on Wera quality; I've used them in production work, they're industrial-grade.
Wera is as good as Wiha.
I have tried them out and am quite impressed. Thanks for all the valuable recommendations
The Fluke 27s finally came out of the boxes. You can see the round calibration stickers on the rear of the units. The full calibration tag is attached to the hardcase handle.
I only had time to quickly try them on low voltage. Only after disconnecting did I realize that swapping test leads may have resulted in different results; too late now to bother going back to try that. The Fluke 27s are reading a slightly lower than the Fluke 8060A, but their leads are daisy-chained further away. Slightly off the image, the HP 3468A is reading slightly higher at 5.0008 V. The voltage source is uncalibrated. The calibration of the 3468A is unknown.
I have a written note reminding me to buy a calibrated voltage source, but totally forgot when searching for reasonable prices. I realized it too late, only after the unit arrived.
Also, I have no information of its source impedance, which could be questionable with 4 DMMs hanging off it at the same time.
The results are plenty good enough for my current needs. Just wait until I find yet another rabbit-hole...
I still need to check the internal battery of the 3468A. It probably also needs to be checked for certain caps.
Along with the others here, I also need to check the 8060A caps as well.
Oh right, there was something I was going to use all this TEA for ...