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What kind of meters do I need to test my atty's AND batts, and where do I get them?? in The E-Cigarette; Okay, I'm using a Joye eGo, one genuine Joye Tech atty left, and a few others from rrvaporz... Seems like ...
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    Full Member ECF Veteran magz's Avatar
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    Question What kind of meters do I need to test my atty's AND batts, and where do I get them??

    Okay, I'm using a Joye eGo, one genuine Joye Tech atty left, and a few others from rrvaporz... Seems like all the atty's I've gotten are bunk or only work for a day or so and then quit producing vapor.

    Also, sometimes it seems like maybe I have a battery issue because I'll pull a fully charged battery off the charger and it won't hit, but I can put the same atty on my 5v passthrough (courtesy of Tim at Hot Vapes, just got it today!) and it works great! Just how it should, and how all my atty's did when I first got my eGo.

    So I'm thinking if I can get meters for both my atty's and my batts maybe I can figure out what my problem is. Thanks!

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    PV Master ECF Veteran CaptJay's Avatar
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    510eGo and THE BUZZ (510) with TV, DIYFlavorshack juices! Drink more water!!

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    Full Member ECF Veteran magz's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by CaptJay View Post
    Can I use that to test both my batteries and atty's?

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    you sure can, you just switch from ohms for testing atty's to dc volts to test batteries.

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    Senior Member ECF Veteran Dubs58's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by magz View Post
    Can I use that to test both my batteries and atty's?
    Yes, as a matter-o-fact I saw that one (someone else posted it) yesterday and even though I have something better it seemed like a good all around type meter that I would buy!
    All we usually need to look for is Volts (0-10), Ohms (0-5) and Continuity (0.00) when touching leads together.

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    I got a cheapy off ebay that arrived today, it's digital, pocket sized and works brilliantly, best of all it only cost a few $

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    Senior Member ECF Veteran Dubs58's Avatar
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    You will need to know more about testing once you get a meter but they are great for everything from testing the battery on your e-cig to testing the battery on your car (12v)!
    Not sure if a lightbulb is good, + goes to center - goes to outer screw part, hair dryer not working? Test the wall socket with this. Its endless, but you just need to learn where to put the multifunction switch AC/DC, Volts, Ohms, etc, but the user manual tells you that too. Once you get one its a learning curve but most in here should be able to help if needed.

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    I'll use my first post on ECF to suggest the low-end cen-tech meter from Harbor Freight. Can be had for as little as $2.99 when on sale (usually in-store, online price right now is $10), and they live for years. Since they're cheap it doesn't matter as much if you lose it, loan it, forget to change it to V from A and before testing a wall outlet, drop it in the toilet, whatever.

    My Harbor Freight cheapie actually ends up getting used more than my $200 Fluke and the serial-connection-to-the-computer meters put together, just because it's expendable.

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    One word of caution -- be careful if you want to test AC outlets with a multimeter. I generally switch to something like:
    Shop IDEAL Analog Multimeter GFCI Receptacle Tester at Lowes.com

    Because it's a plug form factor, no risk of accidentally having leads touch, pushing them in too far, etc.

    Alternately:
    Shop Sperry 80 - 480V AC/DC Voltage Tester at Lowes.com

    Again, due to having fixed probes.

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    Quote Originally Posted by VPDownunder View Post
    I got a cheapy off ebay that arrived today, it's digital, pocket sized and works brilliantly, best of all it only cost a few $
    pocket size? got a link?

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