A model 260E Simpson is the best.
THE best. It has been used by DoD precision measurement labs for the last 30 years.
...and, I use it!
I ran a Precision DOD Calibration Lab (aboard the USS JFK CVA-67) , and shore based labs over 30 years ago. And a NASA Precision Calibration Lab after that. The Simpson was a
NICE analog meter. It is
HANDY for field troubleshooting or for finding a broke diode in a power supply
This is the
BEST you are referring too
?
It would be
More than Adequate for e-cig applications. Like making 'fresh off the charger' battery measurements, to make sure your charger isn't going over, say 4.2 VDC, or to sort a bag of cartos to find the 1.5 ohm ones. It is a
HANDY meter and easy to learn (that's why the DOD uses it). But use it in a 'Precision Lab', not for precision work we didn't.
We didn't even have to use 'Precision Equipment' to calibrate the 260 series meters. A simple Fluke 760A meter calibrator was all that was needed, and I wouldn't call that 'Precision'.
The Simpson is a nice, somewhat fragile analog meter. The best?
Probably wouldn't be used to make ppm voltages measurements, now would it?