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Model: KAIWEETS Digital Multimeter TRMS 6000 Counts Voltmeter Auto-Ranging Fast Accurately Measures Voltage Current Amp Resistance Diodes Continuity Duty-Cycle Capacitance Temperature for Automotive
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I got for $13.99, List price was $29.99-13.00 coupon -3.00 10% promotion = $13.99.
I purchased December 25 for $31.04-11.00 coupon = $20.04 which I will be returning.
Last edited by charlie954 January 9, 2023 at 10:09 AM.
I got for $13.99, List price was $29.99-13.00 coupon -3.00 10% promotion = $13.99.
I purchased December 25 for $31.04-11.00 coupon = $20.04 which I will be returning.
$13 clip coupon still there but 30% off code LOSESFDO no longer works.
I have the same multimeter under another brand. Habotest is the original manufacturer and there are tons of rebrands on Amazon and elsewhere like AVID, AstroAI, Ingco and my discontinued DEWENWILS.
Compared to my handful of budget $10-20 meters, this one is competent and functions as specified though not my favorite mainly due to personal preference (if this is your first meter or you are a casual user, you may not be as picky as me).
6000-count display is good for measuring Li-Ion cells (up to 4350mV) and dedicated mA jack is nice (though I rarely use mA in recent years). The meter is huge and way bigger than necessary. I don't find the secondary Hz readout useful (maybe if you have a generator, UPS, or solar setup to diagnose, otherwise most people will only see DC or 60Hz in their lifetime), the rotary dial labels have lousy contrast (white text on light gray background WTF?, orange on black isn't great neither in less lit area). There is no range hold (though few meters have it nowadays). The built-in NCV on all my meters are never as reliable as my ancient Craftsman/Extech AC voltage detector pen so I never trust them.
They came out with a new version of this meter, HT118E. It has 20,000 counts, voltage range defaults to DC instead of AC, ability to disable auto power off, and it comes with a case. There could be plenty of deals on the HT118A as vendors clear them out. I own a HT118C version of this meter and it's been every bit as accurate as my old BK Precision reference multimeter. With these Chinese meters the leads are weak link. You have to clean them really good and test for steady continuity or just buy some good leads.
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I purchased December 25 for $31.04-11.00 coupon = $20.04 which I will be returning.
I purchased December 25 for $31.04-11.00 coupon = $20.04 which I will be returning.
https://www.fakespot.co
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I have the same multimeter under another brand. Habotest is the original manufacturer and there are tons of rebrands on Amazon and elsewhere like AVID, AstroAI, Ingco and my discontinued DEWENWILS.
Compared to my handful of budget $10-20 meters, this one is competent and functions as specified though not my favorite mainly due to personal preference (if this is your first meter or you are a casual user, you may not be as picky as me).
6000-count display is good for measuring Li-Ion cells (up to 4350mV) and dedicated mA jack is nice (though I rarely use mA in recent years). The meter is huge and way bigger than necessary. I don't find the secondary Hz readout useful (maybe if you have a generator, UPS, or solar setup to diagnose, otherwise most people will only see DC or 60Hz in their lifetime), the rotary dial labels have lousy contrast (white text on light gray background WTF?, orange on black isn't great neither in less lit area). There is no range hold (though few meters have it nowadays). The built-in NCV on all my meters are never as reliable as my ancient Craftsman/Extech AC voltage detector pen so I never trust them.
There is an extensive review and teardown [kerrywong.com] with videos.
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