Maybe so, but all the people saying they can't touch a single feature because procedure/manuals/process are still contradict themselves:
It's not a contradiction. It's explaining that you don't want to make gratuitous changes that will trigger major review. You keep changes to a minimum, both in terms of frequency and scope. That way, procedure and documentation reviews, being arduous as they are for those customers, are kept to a minimum. Not to zero, just to a minimum.
It's not that you
can't change the product at all, it's that if you do it too much, you will piss off key customers. It makes more sense to instead produce
additional models, and that's exactly what Fluke has done over the years. That way, customers that want more features can choose those, and customers who need continuity are also served.
a) The 'V' in "87V" is a roman numeral. Fluke has changed the 87 feature set five times.
Nope.
There have been exactly three "true" 87 models: the original 87 (1988), the 87III (1998), and the 87V (2004). The 87IV (1999) did not replace the 87III, but was sold alongside it, and later became the 187 (2000), and that evolved into the 287 (2008). The 87IV was an
additional model, not an actual upgrade.
AFAIK there was no 87II. I think they went straight to III to align the series numbers with the 70 series III.
b) This new "MAX" model doesn't have the same electrical specifications as the 'V' model.
Nope, it's not identical. And that's probably why they're not canceling the 87V. (Though it begs the question of why bothering, since the 28II already existed.)
c) If it were true the US army would still be using the Fluke 27FM.
And why do you think Fluke still makes the 27II? Legacy procedures and manuals are the only plausible explanation, given that nobody else in their right mind would spend that much money on an average-response meter. Changing those procedures to TRMS would require a lot of work, and entail some risk, so those customers would just as soon not change the procedure.
(FWIW, John Fluke was a Navy technician, so military environments are something Fluke has been focused on from day 1.)
And as I said, Fluke already has models that cater to people who need more features.
They stopped producing the 189.
Umm, okay? What's your point. I didn't say the 189 specifically, I said "models", which they do indeed make, like the 287/289.
I'm sorry but I have to disagree. Fluke doesn't care about features or making the best possible meters any more. They're run by bean counters and just milking their brand name and existing contracts for all they're worth.
**yawn**