Better is a meter that can average 3 or 4 seconds of input to arrive at a real average instead of a single sample taken in about a millisecond. The meter you have is good for the normal, good quality accurate stable source. The old vehicles and tractors we work on are electrically noisy. meaning that at at any one millisecond the actual voltage may be 50, 121, 17, or 7. Assuming it charges. The ignition system, voltage regulator points, and generator brushes all spark and arc. each moment the instantaneous voltage can be anywhere. So There are three possible solutions #1 A cheap analog VOM with a needle and scale (18 bucks or so) they rely on the needle's inertia to stay put averaging the garbage in the wires. They are not critical level accuracy. The second is a Quality analog VOM from Simpson, Triplett I have a 3030, Gardner Bender. these can cost 175+ used. They are as accurate as any disgital, but ease of use requires more thinking. The third is a 100+ dollar digital with auto ranging and certified accuracy. Fluke Drives this boat, but Triplett, and Klein, are in the game. Jim
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Today's Featured Article - A City Guy's First Tractor - by Fred Hambrecht. After living in apartments in Atlanta for more years than I care to remember, the wife and I decided to move to the country. Humming "Green Acres is the place for me..." we purchased a 29 acre tract about 60 miles south of Atlanta. Next came the house, I could talk about that ordeal for another two weeks... But, I want to talk about my tractor! We didn't even own a lawnmower, and all of a sudden we had enough grass to feed all the starving children of the bovine world. Naturally, I talked
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