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The $60 Crafstman DC amp clamp reads to two decimal places in the low range (0-40 amps DC) and the specs say the accuracy is +-2.5% at 0-20 amps, +-3.0% at 20-40 amps. So no, the clamp won't give you laboratory precision in the milliamp range. I've tested with small light bulbs and similar small loads, and it gives exactly the expected readings.
Still can't beat a properly calibrated Simpson 260 analogue meter for use around the house. It may not be as accurate as today's digital models but still extremely useful. Great for a visual capacitance check if you ever need it. You can pick up a good used one for $25 and get a fairly decent calibration on it using some 1% resistors.
Yes I have a digital, I just find myself using it more often than than the DVOM.
Least year, I really wanted an amp clamp type meter that worked with DC, so that I could read "live", real-world current draw on various motorcycle systems while the bike was running or the key on. This is astonishingly difficult to find -- 99.999% of amp clamps out there only work with AC. (Most meters can only read DC amps by being placed in series with the load, so they're limited to 10 amps -- not good for much.)
My only options were a $60 Craftsman meter from my not-so-friendly local Sears or blowing a couple hundred bucks on a Fluke or similar high-end industrial brand. ... I bought the Craftsman.
I was faced with a similar situation a couple of years ago. However, I found a similar meter at Radio Shack before I saw the one at Sears. It was $80, and the only apparent difference is a third amp scale that covers 800 amps.![]()
The test equipment at work has to be calibrated every year (we verify accuracy on medical equipment). When the crew came through to do the shop equipment, I had them run the Radio Shack meter across their tester to see how it fared. I did not ask for a sticker that verified accuracy, so they did it at no charge. On the 40 amp scale, 30 amps showed on the meter as 28. On the 400 amp scale, 300 amps showed as 320. Those were the only two items that would have made it not earn a sticker, but they are close enough for the work that I do on the bikes. For the stuff at work, I use the 30 (or so) year old Fluke 77 that still passes calibration every year.
Since Radio Shack has all but gone under (no active website at the moment), the Craftsman meter is a good choice. :encouragement:
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Depending on meter resolution quiescent draw is useful when battery is being drawn down.Can I see some more examples of DC amps testing on motorcycles??? other than starter draw which I can 'sense' the starter is bad?
Can I see some more examples of DC amps testing on motorcycles??? other than starter draw which I can 'sense' the starter is bad?
very good stuff.Anything where you need to test while the bike is running.
Diagnose bad coils -- see how much current each coil is drawing with key on and at various RPM. Sometimes bad coils will actually work for a while, but they'll draw a lot of current, heat up, and then fail while the bike is running.
Overall "sanity check" -- does the current draw with the key on make sense? You can also pull the fuses and replace one at a time to narrow down an issue.
I was chasing a very tricky issue that turned out to be a broken ground wire deep in the harness. The instrument bulbs worked, but they were actually grounding through the turn signal filaments, and the turn signals were acting strange. Measuring the amperage draw verified that they weren't drawing full current, and watching the readout while wiggling this and that finally located the problem area.
I've used it to verify which wire on electric grip heaters was low heat and which was high heat. Could have done the same thing with the ohm meter, but then I would have had to take apart a connector.
Verify how much current an ignitor or electronic ignition is drawing when the bike is running. Again, if it's drawing more (or less) than it should as it warms up, that may be the source of an intermittent problem.
Check how many amps your farkles (USB outlet, heated grips, LED lights, etc.) are drawing.
That's cool too. The last real meter I had was a Knight-Kit I made from a kit, but I lost it (misplaced) then after a year or so, found it on the ROOF where I'd been ohming CB cables to a tower. needless to say it no longer worked.I have an older non auto-range one of these http://www.ebay.de/itm/Digipol-Mult...-Spannungsmessgeraet-Bundeswehr-/311460858179
Had it 30 years. It doesn't have current or diode function and it's two hands operation but gets straight into tricky places and great for quick tests.
Never seen anybody else with one. They have an assembly shop a mile from here.

