I recently received a new Fluke 289 from TEquipment.net. The probes that came with it were deformed, the black one primarily, so I contacted them for replacements. Theresa at TEquipment was very helpful, contacted Fluke, and I ended up with a new set of TL71 probes, the same type included with the 289. However, both of those new probes are also deformed, and worse than the first set!
As you can see from the photo, it looks like there's some problem in the plastics injection molding process.
While I'd certainly like a proper set of probes, that's not my real concern here.
It's a concern of safety, for myself and others. These are Category IV rated, designed to work in very high-power environments where stuff like arc blast is a serious and deadly safety concern. If the plastic molding is defective, it's entirely possible that the probes may not meet their designed safety ratings, and
may pose a danger to users and a legal liability to Fluke.
What I'd love to see come of this is an official action from Fluke, to determine and correct the source of the problem, and some kind of statement - either a recall on the probes so people can get them replaced with known-safe ones, or a (legally-binding) statement that even if deformed, every probe is guaranteed to meet the safety specifications. (Given that they seem to deform to differing degrees, I don't see how that can be said of all probes, sight-unseen) Of course, these are just my thoughts, and I leave it to Fluke to know the best thing to do. Fluke is a good company, and I am optimistic they will care and do the right thing by their customers.
Has anyone else seen this issue? More data points would probably be useful for Fluke to track down the source of the issue.
I'm hoping that someone here can help get the message to the right people at Fluke, so this defect can be handled in whatever way is best.