I've never heard of one.At home, I still use an old Radio Shack analog multimeter though. I normally don't need better accuracy than it provides.
I think the British term "AVO meter" means Amps Volts Ohms meter. Translated into American, it means multimeter.
Quote from: NutSAK on February 25, 2008, 12:44:43 AMI've never heard of one.At home, I still use an old Radio Shack analog multimeter though. I normally don't need better accuracy than it provides.Here's the MKII that I have http://www.richardsradios.co.uk/avo8.htmlThey do still make them, but due to their size I have not ever really heard of anyone using one.
I think the British term "AVO meter" means Amps Volts Ohms meter. Translated into American, it means multimeter. I have a solid state RCA Master Voltohmyst analog meter in addition to more modern, digital multimeters.
Quote from: parnass on February 25, 2008, 12:52:53 AMI think the British term "AVO meter" means Amps Volts Ohms meter. Translated into American, it means multimeter. I have a solid state RCA Master Voltohmyst analog meter in addition to more modern, digital multimeters.So we are refering to just one and the same thing having two different names!