@BartekBanachewicz not at all, every meter has good and bad points, there is no one that is great in everything. plus you always need many meters, so yet another one shouldn't be a problem at all
ah its fun how exchanges try to squeeze every byte out of their data formats and now regulation demands things like to transfer floating points as 20 byte text fields, and bitfields as 4char words with a meaning...
@BartekBanachewicz Ah, yes, there's analogue too these days. If you selected a clone of one of the Shazamalamadoodads that does analogue it's worth a try
I just noticed that all of the on-line photos of HP3430A are all out of focus for reading the letters "MV". I never thought to check if all other units had the same MV on the panel.
Hmmmm. None listed on ebay either. Maybe this one is more rare than I thought
Was surprised that it showed up in the "Radio Museum". I am familiar with that site (antique radios of course), but I would not have thought to search there.
As far as I know, the usual unit prefix for millions is mega, written as M. I think it should apply to unit-less numbers as well.
Thus, I suggest that
~4.4m
is changed to
~4.4M
It's arguably much cooler to see a bigger M anyway.
I'm thinking of an electric flyswatter with charging capacitor at around 1000V. In practice, can you use a boost converter to charge a 1uF, 1000V capacitor from a 9V battery?
That reminds me of the time ST Microelectronics was doing some failure analysis for me on a part with an STM32
Couldn't resolve it over the phone so they got me to send them a couple of boards with the problem.
They ended up having me ship them to Tunisia, and then promptly lost them.
Apparently Tunisia was their only facility with the necessary test equipment, but afterwards I find out from the local FAE they could have done it in Texas and he had no clue why ST would have me send parts to Tunis.