Multimeter App

I think AllenB makes a good point. The interface is the issue. Some of the interface boxes are just as much if not more than a decent multimeter, so connecting to a phone just gets data collection and sharing.

I’ll look around some more. I just thought someone may have tried it already.
 
So what you're really after is an app plus a hardware dongle. I'm curious what you think that'll offer that isn't currently offered by any of Fluke's handheld meters. I could potentially see how data logging would be better on an iSlate vs a handheld meter. You could also expand it to be a USB oscilloscope or "out of ordinary" event analyzer (and charge separately for those apps).

But a multimeter? My handheld Fluke 73 is 30+ years old. Its UI consists of a rotary switch and a pushbutton. The button locks the range. That's pretty tough to beat both on longevity and usability.

I don't think there's a way to turn a phone/slate into a multimeter without some sort of dongle. I suppose you could use the mic input as a sampling head, but that's going to be AC coupled so you won't be able to measure DC with that. You also won't be able to measure resistance or current.

Tom
 
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So what you're really after is an app plus a hardware dongle. I'm curious what you think that'll offer that isn't currently offered by any of Fluke's handheld meters. I could potentially see how data logging would be better on an iSlate vs a handheld meter. You could also expand it to be a USB oscilloscope or "out of ordinary" event analyzer (and charge separately for those apps).

But a multimeter? My handheld Fluke 73 is 30+ years old. Its UI consists of a rotary switch and a pushbutton. The button locks the range. That's pretty tough to beat both on longevity and usability.

I don't think there's a way to turn a phone/slate into a multimeter without some sort of dongle. I suppose you could use the mic input as a sampling head, but that's going to be AC coupled so you won't be able to measure DC with that. You also won't be able to measure resistance or current.

Tom
Yes it would be for data collection, modeling, data sharing. Also the display could present data in a different way than just numbers. For testing caps you could have a needle to show charge/discharge. You could put all of your resistors in a database and show which ones match, same for transistors. Beats typing all that data into a spreadsheet.

I have two cheep multimeters and they are still working perfectly, so this isn’t about the tool as much as about the data and what I can do with it.
 
I don't see the point of resistor matching. Few circuits require it and you can get ±0.1% tolerance resistors for below a buck apiece. ±0.01% are around $10/each. You'll be hard pressed to build an ohmmeter that can measure with that level of precision. ±1% and ±0.5% tolerance resistors are available for around 10 cents each in low quantity. Buy more and they drop to a few cents/each.

Matching transistors could be more interesting.

Tom
 
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I have two cheep multimeters and they are still working perfectly, so this isn’t about the tool as much as about the data and what I can do with it.
What exactly do you consider "Cheap"? Your best bet is to buy a decent digital multimeter with bluetooth that can send the data to an android device or iphone/ipad. If it were me, i'd buy a Uni-T UT61E+. Last i checked they cost around $100.
 
Cheap? Anything from Harbor Freight. 😆 I thought it would be great to have a display, data collection, and analysis device all in one and a dongle for the sensors and probes. Depending on what software you have on your phone you could have a simple ohm meter, multimeter, or an oscilloscope.
 
Yes I know how to measure a resistor, voltage, amps, capacitance, and inductance.

My question to you: do you know just how capable your phone is?

Chip​

  • A15 Bionic chip
  • 6‑core CPU with 2 performance and 4 efficiency cores
  • 4‑core GPU
  • 16‑core Neural Engine