Cheapest LCR meters I can think of are over $50. Not sure what you want for "cheap" but check around for LCR meters specifically if you need inductance and capacitance. Most DMMs don't do inductance in my experience
WaveTek makes a low-end DMM which measures L and C. One used to be the model DM27XT.
If you cant find DMM with L and C.. some cheaper ones without DMM function might be from ESCORT LCR meter or B&K Precision.
If you cant find DMM with L and C.. some cheaper ones without DMM function might be from ESCORT LCR meter or B&K Precision.
For measuring L, its not just the value but the losses over frequency which are important. A cheap DMM will, if it measures L at all (I've never seen one that does) only measure at a single frequency and not measure loss (or Q).
Worth investing in a decent 4-wire LCR bridge IME.
Worth investing in a decent 4-wire LCR bridge IME.
The cheapest (but not actually cheap) somewhat-decent LCR meter that I've seen (as of a year or so ago), which is not a multimeter, is the Tonghui TH2821A. It has a four-wire probe setup and measures L, C, R, and Z, and measures Q for L, C, and R, and DF for C. Frequency is selectable from 100, 120, 1000, and 10000 Hz. It auto-calibrates by asking you to short and open the test clips. Check ebay.com .
Or, you could make or buy a bridge.
Or, you could make or buy a bridge.
I have the next model up from that one from Tonghui - the only difference is the test frequency goes up to 100kHz I think. Not by any means cheap, but I've found mine invaluable.
The two that dudaindc refers to can be built if you are into PIC microcontrollers; just google "PIC microcontroller LC meter", and you will find several similar projects. The accuracy ultimately depends on the accuracy of a precision capacitor that is used as part of the measurement (so probably no better than 1%).
You can buy even cheaper meters on eBay, don't search for DMM, search for "LCR meter". You can get a handheld model as cheap as < $20 US. Carefully consider the measurement range vs. your needs, the accuracy or lack thereof, and the measurement frequency. If you will use your inductors at 100 kHz, there is little point in measuring them at 100 Hz (which happens to be the frequency that many of the cheap ones use).
You can buy even cheaper meters on eBay, don't search for DMM, search for "LCR meter". You can get a handheld model as cheap as < $20 US. Carefully consider the measurement range vs. your needs, the accuracy or lack thereof, and the measurement frequency. If you will use your inductors at 100 kHz, there is little point in measuring them at 100 Hz (which happens to be the frequency that many of the cheap ones use).
This does not look very bad or too expensive.
U1733C 100Hz/120Hz/1kHz/10kHz/100kHz Handheld LCR Meter | Agilent
U1733C 100Hz/120Hz/1kHz/10kHz/100kHz Handheld LCR Meter | Agilent
The C measurement is generally the limiting factor. If you only want to measure small capacitors, there are a number of inexpensive options. If you want to measure over 25000uF or so, you need to buy a separate LC or capacitance meter and forget about combining all the other DMM functions.
I've done this LCF Esr meter:
LC LCF LCR ESR LCFESR meter tester - DIY / KIT - AVR processor
It works perfect, very good quality reference components and I think it's a really best buy.
Ciao
Guglielmo
Italy
LC LCF LCR ESR LCFESR meter tester - DIY / KIT - AVR processor
It works perfect, very good quality reference components and I think it's a really best buy.
Ciao
Guglielmo
Italy
This does not look very bad or too expensive.
U1733C 100Hz/120Hz/1kHz/10kHz/100kHz Handheld LCR Meter | Agilent
This looks like a fantastic instrument, but it does not quite fit into the category of "cheap". If the OP is willing to spend a couple hundred dollars then maybe somthing like the MS5308 would be suitable. I had assumed that even that was a stretch.
Thanks everyone for the great replies.
My original reason for wanting a cheap LC meter: I have a bunch of crossover inductors that the stickers have fallen off of and I can remember what value they are.
Yes I know I could set up a test frequency and resistor and measure them but I thought having a cheap general LC meter would be good.
As I don't have a lot of free time anymore (2 year old) I was looking for a ready-to-go-meter rather than a kit.
So I'm looking for something to mostly measure crossover caps and inductors and active filter caps.
Thanks again,
Cheers,
Jeff
My original reason for wanting a cheap LC meter: I have a bunch of crossover inductors that the stickers have fallen off of and I can remember what value they are.
Yes I know I could set up a test frequency and resistor and measure them but I thought having a cheap general LC meter would be good.
As I don't have a lot of free time anymore (2 year old) I was looking for a ready-to-go-meter rather than a kit.
So I'm looking for something to mostly measure crossover caps and inductors and active filter caps.
Thanks again,
Cheers,
Jeff
Last edited:
I ended up going with the ultra-cheap Honeytek A6243L:2nF-200uF, 2mH-20H:
3 1/2 LCD Inductor/Capacitor LC Meter 2nF-200uF/2mH-20H | eBay
If I can get out of autoscale and manually select the range I can put it into the xover friendly 100Hz for the 20uf and 200uf scales (otherwise the test freq it 1kHz for L (100Hz @20H) and C):
http://tbphoto.bababian.com/upload2/angela1990/Dental/DRB1_m.png
I'll let you know how it works,
Thanks for the help,
Cheers,
Jeff
3 1/2 LCD Inductor/Capacitor LC Meter 2nF-200uF/2mH-20H | eBay
If I can get out of autoscale and manually select the range I can put it into the xover friendly 100Hz for the 20uf and 200uf scales (otherwise the test freq it 1kHz for L (100Hz @20H) and C):
http://tbphoto.bababian.com/upload2/angela1990/Dental/DRB1_m.png
I'll let you know how it works,
Thanks for the help,
Cheers,

Jeff
Last edited:
There are some that are multimeters DMM, that do L,C,R & F...
Alpha made one.
There is another brand too... or more.
They can be found, in the ~60-90$ range.
Perfectly serviceable for getting close to the real value, not half bad actually. Won't replace a precision instrument IF you need one.
I have a precision bridge, but rarely need to use it... I end up using that mostly for precise R measurements... although it will permit external freq source so you can see what the cap (for example) does at some reasonably high frequency...
check ebay, of course...
_-_-bear
Alpha made one.
There is another brand too... or more.
They can be found, in the ~60-90$ range.
Perfectly serviceable for getting close to the real value, not half bad actually. Won't replace a precision instrument IF you need one.
I have a precision bridge, but rarely need to use it... I end up using that mostly for precise R measurements... although it will permit external freq source so you can see what the cap (for example) does at some reasonably high frequency...
check ebay, of course...
_-_-bear
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