Digitour Multimeter Q1467 Manually
Download now any manual for DIGITOR Q1467 DIGITAL MULTIMETER. Agiler Usb Dongle Driver. Digital multimeters battery placement. The only mention of the battery in the manual was to 'insert the appropriate battery taking note of the polarity'.
21/4/07 4:41:21 AM Titan Personally for $250 you should be able to pick up a nice entry-level Fluke, which should last you until the end of your days. But in all honesty I'd probably be looking at spending no more than $50 or so for an Introduction to Electronics-type multimeter. Jaycar have got a CAT. QM1539 for $59.95 that should get you going very nicely as a start.
Hell, I saw a 4-digital Yum-Cha one at Crazy Clark's the other week for $12.95, almost bought it to have it for the downstairs reapir workshop bench at home rather than have to traipse up 'n down the stairs with my regular one (which I just realised turned 25 this year, by the way - but it did cost me 3 days pay back then.). Oops, forgot about the CRO.
This would be a little (!) dearer than a meter, so as a starter unit you miiiiight be better hunting around for a reasonable second-handy. And what sort of electronics you going to start dabbling in - digital or RF (radio)? Download King Of Fighter 2005 For Pc Free. You can get a low-freq CRO for not many dollars new, such as a Jaycar CAT. QC1920, 10 MHz single channel. Maybe not what I'd personally buy but it's only $155.00. A 20MHz dual channel is far nicer to play with but Jaycar have got a CAT. QC1922 for $399 - big price difference.
Edited by merlin13: 21/4/2007 04:52:04 AM ----- Anything not nailed down is mine, and anything I can prise up is not nailed down. Carpe Jugulum. Carpe Scrotum. 23/4/07 7:15:06 PM Banned Quote by bnew Quote by merlin13 Personally unless you get some structured Turorials and lessons I'd be inclined to stick with using ICs rather than going backwards to effectively Diode Logic to create the basic AND/NAD/NOR, etc stuff. Else you might end up becoming too bogged down on the analog stuff.
Unless you actally want to jump into analog, of course. I'd have to agree there. Don't want to reinvent the wheel, well at least not too much I understand what you guys mean there.
But you see, I find that stuff interesting! ----- MAGICAL FREE LESSONS AND UNICORNS!!!
Omfg And this is how a CPU works. 24/4/07 10:25:59 AM Guru I have an old Dick Smith Q-1426 multimeter which does everything you'd need as an entry level meter plus and has lasted for years! It has a protective rubber boot which helps when it gets knicked around. Looks like the equivalent today is the Q-1456 at $50. As for the scope they are brilliant if you want to chase analog or digital signals in circuits, testing TV sets, stereos or digital timing circuits. I picked one up off Ebay for $100 recently. It's old but seems to work perfectly well!
About 100Mhz should be fine for fooling around or even a 20Mhz one depending on what you want to do. ----- Proceed.you 1980s, hairdo challenged, anarchist.make my day! If only b1ff and dead people can read hex how many people can read hex???