Using a multimeter and set it on 200V DC - that's the lowest on this meter.
Tested a 1.5V and it reads 2.8
Tested a 3V and it reads 6.
Just replaced the battery.
The meter is ETEKCITY.
Any suggestions?
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Sign up to join this communityUsing a multimeter and set it on 200V DC - that's the lowest on this meter.
Tested a 1.5V and it reads 2.8
Tested a 3V and it reads 6.
Just replaced the battery.
The meter is ETEKCITY.
Any suggestions?
Figure 1. A comparison with an analogue meter. 1.5 volt will barely move the pointer and any reading will have little precision.
A 200 V meter is not a suitable instrument for measuring a 1.5 V cell. The resolution isn't available at the accuracy you require. Digital meters have specifications for error typically as a percentage of full scale ± a couple of digits of the display. That's what you're seeing.
I've never seen a "multimeter" that had a minimum V DC range of 200 V. For low voltage measurement you'll need a more versatile meter.
Please disregard my question.
I had the multimeter on AC voltage - duh!
I posted this also for other newbies running into the same issue.
I've added the correct symbols to look for in the image below
Now why in AC it reads double of what it should be in DC - there should be an interesting reason.
Thanks guys.
if the minimum voltage range is 200V, the precision is a bit lower in your test range. the catalog should mention the resolution in every range. and there are a few calibration pots on the multimeter board if you open it up, and if the manufacturer deisignates them to find out which one controls which parameter.
I searched up etekcity and it seems they make a few applicanes and ordinary things, but not precision things.