Kitz Forum
Computers & Hardware => Hardware - Deals & Bargains => Topic started by: 4candles on February 05, 2018, 07:54:16 PM
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My trusty old Maplin soldiers on, but sometimes it's handy to have two, and this looks pretty decent for the price.
Looks from the illustration to have 4mm (banana) sockets, which I like on a meter.
https://www.lidl.co.uk/en/Non-Food-Offers.htm?articleId=10610
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Positive comment from EEVBlog member -
https://www.eevblog.com/forum/testgear/what-an-oddity-the-powerfix-profi-digital-multimeter!/
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Certainly looks good, and always amazed at how cheaply such things can be sold.
It has set me thinking, does anybody else remember a DVM from Sinclair (or was it Heathkit) late 1970s, probably retailing at a price similar to a contemporary colour TV? Not sure if it was a diy kit, or ready made. Anyway, the point was, even though logic chips were already ten a penny, and medium scale integration quite common in calculators, the device I recollect was built entirely using discreet components, individual transistors. :o
A few minutes on Google has failed to find any evidence of said device. Is it just another figment of my imagination? ???
@4Candles, apols for verging slightly off topic. Will gladly delete and repost as a new thread, if requested. :)
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@7LM Och, nae botha - the info is in the OP.
Can't help on the DVM. I can remember various digital devices of the period, but not any comprising entirely discrete components.
I do remember in the mid 70s my brother-in-law paying around £40 for a very basic CBM LED calculator for his cricket statistics!