Clean the lead contacts with the meter and make sure they have a solid connection.
I'd thought of this too, but doesn't it make working with the wire quite difficult?
I'm also having trouble with my multimeter. I test the resistance of the leads and it will give me anywhere from 1.8 down to .4ish, then when I go to check on my atty it gives me a ridiculous reading like 8.9 or something. Now I know my 6/5 wraps of 30g kanthal is not 7.1 ohms, so what is going on here? Tried changing the battery and that didn't help.
Him having a similar problem with checking battery voltage. The meter just keeps gradually going up.
Sorry, not trying to hijack, but does anyone have any experience with this?
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Leads, especially cheap leads, can sometimes loose contact between the wire and the connection or probe. Especially if they get stressed often or hard to break a wire or a bad solder joint. If you have a quality meter, test with just some copper wires and a known resistance (resistor). If it works, try picking up another set of leads.
If it's a cheap meter, it might be easier/cheaper to replace it.
I like the carto atty meters
like Cartomizer and Atomizer Ohm Meter - Meters - Accessories
23 bucks isnt too bad.
Ah, well the wire trick probably won't work with that one.
If the leads can be unplugged from the meter, you could just use some wire as temporary leads to troubleshoot. But if they're molded into the meter, that would make it MUCH more difficult. And replacement leads might cost more than the meter.
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