On Avometers, I never got the obsession with them. Maybe I'm too young. Maybe I'm poisoned by the memory of crappy analogue meters. I've used Avos before but they just don't sit well with me. Why?
1. If you drop them they are toast.
2. They have weird battery requirements.
3. They have dubious safety characteristics and always did have.
4. They're bloody huge.
5. They appear to have been universally stored in damp sheds at their current age.
6. The bottom end of the scale is really janky even on new ones (compare to HP analogue meter calibration...)
We should just let the upcyclers have the bloody things...
Seeds of discord sewn. I shall now observe from a distance
I bet you're older than me, by quite some margin, but I love Avometers
Yep, if you drop them, they're donald ducked, though the movements can survive, the casing will be shattered. The ones I have from the 1920s, 1930s etc are a real example of people who've taken good care of them. I think they were always intended for bench use, though I have used one before when setting up load cells in an industrial setting, where I wanted to see the swing of the movement to give me good indication from the 0-10v range of the load cell.
I guess I'm lucky to have the space for all the stuff I have. TEA, is addictive, especially Avo and Marconi stuff, it's my weakness.
Editulation: I must say the calibration of my ones are good, consistent with calibrated standards and shows the same result as a 6.5 digit Agilent DMM in cal which we have at work.
We had an AVO 8 Mk5 that was perfect from the outside, the meter movement destroyed (the plastic that held the movement in place shattered). I did swap out the movement from another scrap one, only to find the tw&t that bought it on a scrap order then sold it on ePay for a premium as almost NOS condition.
Having been inside that one I never want to work on another Mk5, with those crappy flex wiring looms, I have one have that needs rehoming (reads low on most ranges), now I have a nice AVO Test Set Multirange No 1.
Also have many Taylor meters, aka Windsor for export models meters, some of these have a 5kV range.
And a few other makes: GEC Selectest, a fancy US made Phaostron 666 VOM (110V mains required), a wee Triplett 666H (also has 5kV range
), probably one or two others I've forgotten.
David