Grossel
Well-Known Member
Hi forum.
In a local forum (not particularly focused on technology) I had a discussion with one guy needed help identify wich wire is what (a car) and I told him how to use an ohm meter for doing this.
I also warned against measuring (in ohm mode) on parts that may be put under voltage. This may be stupid because I haven't in fact making any reading about the internal circuitry of a standard multimeter, just assuming it provide a constant current source and a simple voltage meter, and that a voltage applied on the test leads may harm the multimeter.
Then of course, there comes this other forum user being totally sure that it is totally safe for any multimeter to put the test lead (in ohm mode) over a 12V battery and that the multimeter cannot get any damage from this.
So my question : are all multimeters equipped in such a way that in ohm-mode, it is capable to withstand input voltage ?
Or to be more precise : are there a standard that the manufacturers of multimeters tend to follow, or any papers that can support that claim ?
In a local forum (not particularly focused on technology) I had a discussion with one guy needed help identify wich wire is what (a car) and I told him how to use an ohm meter for doing this.
I also warned against measuring (in ohm mode) on parts that may be put under voltage. This may be stupid because I haven't in fact making any reading about the internal circuitry of a standard multimeter, just assuming it provide a constant current source and a simple voltage meter, and that a voltage applied on the test leads may harm the multimeter.
Then of course, there comes this other forum user being totally sure that it is totally safe for any multimeter to put the test lead (in ohm mode) over a 12V battery and that the multimeter cannot get any damage from this.
So my question : are all multimeters equipped in such a way that in ohm-mode, it is capable to withstand input voltage ?
Or to be more precise : are there a standard that the manufacturers of multimeters tend to follow, or any papers that can support that claim ?