Depends on the meter, most multimeters can measure amps, but you have to put the meter "inline" with the current.I have a Chinese multimeter it works well enough I only have the needle probes for it. Could I touch it to the live leads on a qb648 to see what wattage is pulling across it? I have three qb648s in series?
This is the only answerDepends on the meter, most multimeters can measure amps, but you have to put the meter "inline" with the current.
Safest and easiest way is to use a non-contact ammeter which uses hall sensors (magnets) to measure current:
View attachment 5390724
Thanks good to know!Depends on the meter, most multimeters can measure amps, but you have to put the meter "inline" with the current.
Safest and easiest way is to use a non-contact ammeter which uses hall sensors (magnets) to measure current:
View attachment 5390724
-noCould I touch it to the live leads on a qb648 to see what wattage is
Didn’t even think of pawn shops hell yeaIn my experience the Chinese cheapo multimeters aren't accurate enough for this. Go buy a used fluke or extech from the pawn shop, that's what I did. The clamp meters and some have a slot you slide wires into, those are the only ones that read amperage on a circuit without disconnecting wires
In my experience cheap multi-meters are fine for most things with the exception of the amp clamps. The one on my UNI-T UT203 ($30?) can be a little temperamental at low currents and I have to squeeze the clamp a little to be sure it's 100% closed. Always be sure you can get consistent readings...I have a Chinese multimeter it works well enough I only have the needle probes for it. Could I touch it to the live leads on a qb648 to see what wattage is pulling across it? I have three qb648s in series?