What is your intended use for this meter?
Thanks for the response Briank.
Certainly, hope it helps!
I intend to use it as a general purpose meter, but particularly for testing, fixing, and occasionally building electronic equipment, calibrating tape machines, and also for around the house.
The meter just came in the mail this afternoon and I've been playing with it a little. I replace a lot of capacitors in old gear so I wanted to see how the cap check is. I checked some new unused caps and according to the meter they were indeed in spec. I then checked some old caps I just pulled out of a hi-fi tube preamp that managed to bubble its phono section caps in only 9 years (poor chassis ventilation!) The
bubbled caps all tested well out of spec according to the meter. Some other caps pulled out of areas that didn't get exposed to as much heated tested closer to spec according to the meter. Amprobe claims the maximum capacitance value is 9,999uf which is pretty high for a meter in this class. I tested some old 10,000uf caps pulled from the power supply in that tube pre and they tested around 9,100ufs--which I believe--and it shows that the meter will indeed check values that high.
I also did some general AC and DC voltage tests on outlets and batteries against another meter. Seems calibrated accurately. AC auto-ranging has a couple second delay which is pretty typical. Nice thing about this meter is you can override that feature and set the range manually--then it reads very quickly. It also checked vDC of batteries quite quickly even with auto-ranging.
I also tested temp measurements with the thermocouple and found it to be pretty fast and responsive. It was also accurate against other thermometers I'm familiar with, at least at room temps. It's kind of a bonus feature to me but it will be very handy for finding overheating chips and transistors in misbehaving equipment.
I'm also already making use of the MIN/MAX feature so I can see how well one of my Furman power line regulators is clamping down on an AC line that its built-in meter says is dropping sometimes. By taking extended sample measurements from the Furman and the outlet it's plugged into and comparing the max and min volts read and the difference between them I'll have some insight to how stable it is. Should be a handy feature--it would also be useful for tracing intermittent connections especially in "vintage" or hot-running gear.
Only beefs so far are that the continuity check is a little scratchy at first; the backlight doesn't stay illuminated as long as I'd like and looks a bit splotchy. I'm glad to have one at all, it's a nice luxury and will be great for taking measurements in dark places like under consoles and big tape machine cabinets, behind equipment racks and so-on.
Overall my first impression is that this Amprobe is a big step up from the cheaper meters I've been using. Sorry I can't compare it directly to a Fluke. It seems to be competing with the Fluke 117 which costs about twice the price and doesn't spec quite as well on paper. I'm sure it's a nice meter but you can see why I chose the Amprobe.