I’m not sure. They really crummy ones that are comparable to the old brown Micronta is $5-10 MSRP at Harbor Freight and they very, very frequently give them away. I would also suspect the current ones are better in virtually every way from battery life to probe pliability to display size.
Edit: to your point, tho, I do recall $27 for the entry level one I got for my first community college class in the mid90s.
True, there’s a wide range. But if I go back through my VOMs (and I have plenty, including some pretty ancient ones), I can see very cheap ($10) units from both time periods. I was speaking more of units from both periods roughly equivalent in durability, build quality, and features. IOW, I could get comparable units in both periods for, say, $40.
Fluke meters are a weird case. One reason they are still competitive and sought after is that, in addition to good accuracy and build quality, they are frequently referenced in existing adjustment and calibration procedures.
Right, but I was curious about the change in terminology, i.e. did “multimeter” differentiate themselves by having additional measurements on top of those, or was it just a linguistic quirk that changed over time but still describe fundamentally the same machine?
Weird for certain. I’ve had opportunities to use a bunch of them at jobsites and hobby situations and I can’t understand the cost of Flukes, at least the lower end ones where there’s a lot of competition. My current meter an Extech that is barely $100 new, the equivalent Fluke is like triple and still doesn’t have all the features. Some jobs and projects have arcflash and calibration requirements but not too many.
I haven’t done any research, but, based on being in the business since 1971, I think of VOM as being an older term as far as actual usage by techs. Our meters had only three functions. And, frankly, we usually just called them “meters.” Using four syllables for “multimeter” seemed unnecessary. But nowadays it seems more accurate to refer to them as “multimeters” simply because they have so many more features.
TL;DR: You have a Triplett 310, you have a VOM. You have a newer Extech of equivalent price, it’s a multimeter.
Is there a typo there? Because “a buck a dozen” isn’t even remotely close to the same price as “a buck a ball”.
This sounds like some of the tricks that Texas Instruments pulled. They’re popular not because they’re actually particularly good, but because all of the textbooks and all of the standardized tests use them. At least some of which, I’m pretty sure, is due to bribes, kickbacks, and other under-the-table dealing.
Speaking of which, a TI graphing calculator cost in the mid-80s back in 1993 when they were first released, and they still cost in the mid-80s (the old joke is that the model number is the price). And unlike most electronics, it’s the same product now as it was then (see what I said above about them not being particularly good).
I’m a generation younger but same to all. DMM, DVM, VOM, multimeter, voltmeter. I used meter upthread and also know of d’Arsonval off the top of my head.
I bought about half a dozen NIB Weston dial gauges for a song at a ham radio fest earlier this year and hooked some up to assorted stuff to make them dance. One is a DC ammeter with a few Amps capacity that I have to an audio amplifier so the needle bumps with the beat.
Guitars. In fact, things have improved since the 60s, when the price of a crappy Kay or Harmony guitar would get you a nice entry-level Yamaha nowadays.
Yes, but so is everyone else. I see different airfares than my daughter sees. My wife sees different prices on Amazon. She has Prime and I don’t, she often sees a different (higher) price for an item that I ask her to order for me. So much for free shipping.
Basically right now the “price” of anything is not so easy to determine. So many “private” discounts. What is the average price paid. I don’t know, you don’t know, does the BLS know? How?