EEVblog

Sdílet
Vložit
  • čas přidán 4. 09. 2017
  • Is a $7 LCR Meter / Component Tester from Ebay any good?
    Dave tests the M328 (LCR-T4) model component tester.
    HUGE Forum Thread:
    www.eevblog.com/forum/testgea...
    Forum summary videos here: • 1 of 3 Official Englis...
    This group seems to maintain a version of the firmware:
    www.mikrocontroller.net/artic...
    EEVblog Main Web Site: www.eevblog.com
    The 2nd EEVblog Channel: / eevblog2
    Support the EEVblog through Patreon!
    / eevblog
    Donate With Bitcoin & Other Crypto Currencies!
    www.eevblog.com/crypto-currency/
    EEVblog Amazon Store (Dave gets a cut):
    astore.amazon.com/eevblogstore-20
    T-Shirts: teespring.com/stores/eevblog
    💗 Likecoin - Coins for Likes: likecoin.pro/@eevblog/dil9/hcq3
  • Věda a technologie

Komentáře • 946

  • @DavidChen831212
    @DavidChen831212 Před 6 lety +16

    The original project name is AVR-Transistortester, opensourced firmware/schematic/documents maintained by German hacker Karl-Heinz Kübbeler.

  • @WisdomVendor1
    @WisdomVendor1 Před 6 lety +448

    Dave, a guy with a $9000.00 rolex watch was once told by a guy that had a $3.00 digital watch "Nice wrist watch, it seems to be only a few seconds off"

    • @hashemmehyar9614
      @hashemmehyar9614 Před 6 lety +38

      WisdomVendor1 I stopped and gazed after reading this, true !

    • @stevenbiars6212
      @stevenbiars6212 Před 5 lety +26

      I'm more of an Omega man, so I'll go with that. Rolex is overpriced -- their prices have doubled in the past few years. Anyhow, with that said, I'll give you a bit of perspective on Swiss made watches. I know a $25 quartz Timex will tell time more precisely than a $5,000+ mechanical Omega Seamaster, but I appreciate the craftsmanship that went into it. Think of it like this -- if both watches cost exactly the same amount ($25), which one would you rather own and why? I'd rather have the mechanical masterpiece because I appreciate the craftsmanship, artistry, and engineering that went into it, rather than the quartz. Perhaps you favor the electronics of the humble quartz. Nobody passes down a Timex.

    • @laurv8370
      @laurv8370 Před 5 lety +6

      Espinosa versus Tano Cariddi? (water-wall-clock vs quartz-watch scene)

    • @explosivedude8295
      @explosivedude8295 Před 4 lety +17

      Wrist sundial gang where ya at?

    • @dewe1462
      @dewe1462 Před 3 lety +11

      @@explosivedude8295 nah.. prefer the wrist pendulum clock

  • @richfiles
    @richfiles Před 6 lety +90

    Testing a piezo speaker is particularly fun, as you can hear it probing at the part to determine it basically operates as a capacitor.
    Really interesting to get to hear it go through the motions though.

  • @evahle
    @evahle Před 6 lety +1

    Thank you for doing a great job running your tests on this unit. This answered many questions I had about it. Awesome!!

  • @gtroc71
    @gtroc71 Před 6 lety +432

    Dave, you can calibrate this device by shorting all 3 test points and pushing test. After a short process will ask you to remove short and at some stage ask to install a capacitor. Would be interesting how accurate it is after that process. Thanks for the vid!

    • @SpaghettiEnterprises
      @SpaghettiEnterprises Před 6 lety +27

      Wait are you serious?? I've had one for a while and I never knew that! Where did you get this info?

    •  Před 6 lety +37

      it is written in the "manual" lol I used for weeks and was not getting the precise values that it was supposed to, so I checked the "manual" and there it was. Works perfectly. Have to calibrate every time and in each leads change btw

    • @SirArghPirate
      @SirArghPirate Před 6 lety +8

      Does that mean that the calibrated values are not stored in eeprom? It should be relatively easy to fix that..

    • @blaser80
      @blaser80 Před 6 lety +4

      +Louis Stubbolo there are videos of people calibrating on youtube, saw them before I purchased one. Now you can get them for $10 with a case.

    • @ethanpoole3443
      @ethanpoole3443 Před 6 lety +14

      SirArghPirate They may well be stored in eeprom, but if you are using external test leads or a different set of pads to measure your parts then each set of leads/pads will have a slightly different innate resistance, capacitance, and inductance that needs to be accounted for. It is one of those things that must be calibrated out whenever you change leads and from time to time (such as with changes in environment) even on higher end LCR meters because it does not know when you changed the leads and that new calibration coefficients are now needed, so it is ordinarily a manual process. If using external leads you would ideally use shielded leads so that the leads do not interfere with one another nor pick up external fields that can alter readings (or else keep your leads extremely short). Typically you will have several sets of test leads ranging from alligator clips to SMD tweezers, etc., for testing various types of components, hence lead changes are not uncommon during use (and at other times you may switch to using the built in pads, which would also be equivalent to a lead change).
      I am grateful Dave made this review as I am very impressed by the quality of the firmware and its overall capabilities. Even though I already have perfectly good transistor testers and very nice LCR meters I may still be inclined to order one or two of these in the future, preferably outfitted with a proper case for added protection just to compliment my other gear, or to loan out to others as I do not loan out my lab grade test gear.

  • @danielsullivan87
    @danielsullivan87 Před 6 lety +51

    Thanks for looking into this! Saw the furore in the mailbag comments and it's good to see you addressing it :)

    • @EEVblog
      @EEVblog  Před 6 lety +30

      Yeah, I didn't give it a fair suck of the sav.

    • @nicholai414
      @nicholai414 Před 6 lety +6

      EEVblog Yeah Dave, I've seen these being reviewed by other channels, I'm glad you gave it another shot since I was really waiting for your review on it before I add one to my setup. (Yours is the only channel I trust for reviews on test equipment)

  • @John_Ridley
    @John_Ridley Před 6 lety +80

    One of these is all I have for LCR meter, and it's more than good enough. All I need one for is to identify messed up electrolytics that have caused a power supply to fail. Finding an electrolytic that should be at 1 ohm ESR measuring 35 ohms is good enough.

  • @brian9394
    @brian9394 Před 6 lety +1

    This is a fantastic video Dave! It brings back lots of memories of what we went through in early 90's to get PC's to function. This would be a great video to watch for any IT/Electronics 'history' course. Thanks!

  • @bitrot42
    @bitrot42 Před 6 lety +74

    I have that exact tester... It's true that the absolute measurements are a bit off, but it's fairly consistent when you repeat measurements, so it's great for matching components. I've used it to find the closest resistors in the pile, and to match MOSFET gain when rebuilding an amplifier. Fantastic bit of kit once you understand its capabilities and limitations.

    • @khashmeshab
      @khashmeshab Před 5 lety +11

      I hope you've shortened the three inputs of your device and calibrated it. Because I have the same model and after calibration, it's pretty accurate. You can also upgrade the firmware on it using the original repository, but it's a little bit tricky.

    • @Davidsmith218
      @Davidsmith218 Před 2 lety

      How do you use to match mosfets Gain because I not seeing the numbers this is showing I'm trying to match irfp260n mosfets and Google is no help if I search what's on the display

    • @irishguy200007
      @irishguy200007 Před rokem

      Can this test components in a circuit without removing them?

    • @DoubleMonoLR
      @DoubleMonoLR Před rokem

      @@irishguy200007 It will depend on the circuit, and the component being tested, as items can be in parallel etc. It's no different than with any testing.

  • @SidneyCritic
    @SidneyCritic Před 6 lety +21

    Thanks for doing a follow-up and correcting the Mailbag vid.
    Info like this on cheap stuff is invaluable to us small part-time hobbyists because we simply can't afford expensive stuff or can't warrant expensive for such low use.

  • @billallen2419
    @billallen2419 Před 6 lety

    I have had one of these for 12 months and I must say it does come in handy. Thanks for the revisit. Keep up the good work mate.

  • @cyberplant
    @cyberplant Před 6 lety +1

    Amazing! Yesterday I bought one of this here, and I never thought they were 'known' in the world!! I'm pretty happy with it so far!

  • @aidanfransen3571
    @aidanfransen3571 Před 6 lety +15

    Good to see you following up on the last vid! At least our comments do not go unnoticed :)... also good to see you giving it a fair test :)

    • @sausage5849
      @sausage5849 Před 6 lety +1

      Sounds like they might do in the forum though lol

  • @Stefan_Payne
    @Stefan_Payne Před 6 lety +8

    Nice to see that you made an additional video about that device, thumbs up.
    Oh and what you want with that is to test, if the component you put in is OK or not and if the replacement part is somewhat close to the original part.

    • @ChristianRThomas
      @ChristianRThomas Před 6 lety +3

      That's a very good idea. Sometimes you want components with some element of shittiness, like ESR, when you come to replace them during a repair. Or if a salvaged part is even worth keeping or if it falls below even lash-up standards.

  • @JerryEricsson
    @JerryEricsson Před 6 lety +2

    I have owned one of these for about 3 years now. Two years back I picked up one of those DIY Kit mini oscilloscope and put it together on the booth table of our RV. To sort out the parts for the kit I used my version (A bit more developed then yours) to sort the parts for assembly. It did a great job. Since I rarely use surface mount, I have soldered alligator clips on the pads so I can hook to parts that do not fit nicely in the plug deal. I use it very often and it has always done a great job for me.

  • @bkbaxterNYnowIN
    @bkbaxterNYnowIN Před 5 lety

    Definitely enjoyed this video. Informative and thorough, but also very approachable and fun to watch/listen to. Besides, it's good to know that the very similar component tester I recently ordered might be quite useful and reasonably accurate. It really is amazing what $7 can get you these days.

  • @kuhrd
    @kuhrd Před 6 lety +6

    Many of these units also offer a way to calibrate them and once done are pretty much bang on. Some of the software versions also offer more accuracy depending on the external ADC being used onboard. I have a couple of these units and they come in really handy for testing salvaged parts or doing basic transistor or mosfet matching.

  • @srduke
    @srduke Před 5 lety +6

    I know I'm late to the party but I've got one of these and it's perfect, as you say, for checking pin outs on transistors etc. Certainly a lot quicker than trawling the net for data sheets. I also use it for checking that LEDs are working before soldering them to a pcb.

  • @LydellAaron
    @LydellAaron Před 5 lety

    Your tone of voice suggests that you are genuinely impressed with this product! I am very impressed and will likely buy one too. Thank you for sharing!

  • @PeteBlakemore
    @PeteBlakemore Před 6 lety +1

    Good on you Dave, learning as you go and not afraid to admit it!

  • @tohopes
    @tohopes Před 6 lety +131

    Great! Now ship it to Big Clive so he can draw pictures and make it explode.

    • @agentsmith3577
      @agentsmith3577 Před 6 lety +3

      I think he has one, or I might just be thinking of Julian Ilett

    • @EngineeringVignettes
      @EngineeringVignettes Před 6 lety +7

      Agent Smith - I know Julian has one for sure
      - Eddy

    • @sausage5849
      @sausage5849 Před 6 lety +2

      Yep, thought that was pretty good at the time I saw it too

    • @petti78
      @petti78 Před 6 lety +6

      Pretty sure Julian has a ton of these. Just because. :)

    • @markg735
      @markg735 Před 6 lety +2

      msylvain59 uses one of these frequently in his teardowns.

  • @yaidontknowwhattoput
    @yaidontknowwhattoput Před 6 lety +210

    Lcr meters are super complex. The fact that this $7 jobby can get it done is astounding.

    • @UpcycleElectronics
      @UpcycleElectronics Před 6 lety +10

      It's ballpark LCR figure only. Real LCR's use a higher frequency and test voltage than this little device is capable of. The K-Firmware from the OSHW project has a slightly more versatile measuring funtion that requires an ATmega328, a 16MHz Xtal, a relay, and a capacitor to add a Sampling ADC method.

    • @iceberg789
      @iceberg789 Před 6 lety +3

      is it too complex ?

    • @UpcycleElectronics
      @UpcycleElectronics Před 6 lety +47

      iceberg789
      Ok... detailed answer it is...
      As a hobbyist I have been researching this project thoroughly for the last month, and I've been posting none monotized info on YT and the EEVBlog thread. (I couldn't care less if you check out what I've done so far,.. just saying it's there/I'm no EE/here's my citation of what I've researched so far)
      I recall Markus R. -The Project Developer of the official M-firmware, said that the LCR limitation is due to the input/output limitations of the microcontroller. You need a more powerful signal at a higher frequency and most importantly a faster ADC. The internal ADC of the AVR MCU is the primary limitation factor in this device and the code has to wait on the ADC to catch up in several places. Even with an additional frequency ic and buffer circuit, the AVR MCU can't work fast enough for all channels. There are other OSHW projects that use an AVR MCU to create a more accurate LCR by dedicating everything to the task, at least so I've read and posted about within the last 10 pages on the EEVBlog thread.
      This AVR TT project has already moved on to the ATmega644/1284/2560 because there is no more room in the 328's flash/eeprom with the popular auxillary options enabled. There are no clones available for the V2 project but there are DIY files for all versions of the project if you want a real AVR Transistor Tester instead of a cheap substandard design (says the guy that bought a clone...then started researching it).
      This project actually started with an ATmega8, and grew to the 88, 168, and 328, because the firmware grew and grew over the years since 2009. It's already optimized between C and Assembly as well. The Devs are not inexperienced amateurs. The real project hardware development is actually based in the Russian thread. A lot of the communication between them and the devs is direct. The Russian's have a larger online presence of skilled engineers that like to post about their DIY projects much more than the English speaking community. Thus their 406 page thread versus the English 160 pages, (both are about the same size per page). The software is primarily on the German side with M-Firmware on the EEVBlog thread as well. This isn't some simple device that has room to improve, hundreds of people have already added their professional touches and suggestions to get the project to where it is today. This project is designed to have stupid-simple hardware (that ALL of the clones screw up) and extreme level software. The only way to really understand the entire project is if you speak fluent German, Russian, and English. Unfortunately, Google Translate sucks at Russian. This is why I created the image indexes for all of the forums (still working on Russian). Schematics are universal as are pictures of interesting hardware. By attempting to show you all of the images as quickly as you can visually register them I'm trying to help people search for what they want to research further using a translation program without attempting to read the whole thread like I am trying to do. I add almost all images with their page number referenced to these videos. Again, these are not monotized, and never will be. It's just something I am doing to share my notes as I explore the project.

    • @iceberg789
      @iceberg789 Před 6 lety +6

      thanks for all of that, i will now need some time to digest all that.

    • @UpcycleElectronics
      @UpcycleElectronics Před 6 lety +7

      iceberg789
      I don't mind explaining what you don't understand. I'm just a few years into learning this stuff myself.
      These links are to posts where other people smarter than myself explain the LCR/ESR measurement capabilities of the device.
      1. www.eevblog.com/forum/testgear/$20-lcr-esr-transistor-checker-project/msg530451/#msg530451
      2. www.eevblog.com/forum/testgear/$20-lcr-esr-transistor-checker-project/msg195402/#msg195402
      3. www.eevblog.com/forum/testgear/$20-lcr-esr-transistor-checker-project/msg1050001/#msg1050001
      4. www.eevblog.com/forum/testgear/$20-lcr-esr-transistor-checker-project/msg432772/#msg432772
      Post w/links to other DIY dedicated LCR projects:
      5. www.eevblog.com/forum/testgear/$20-lcr-esr-transistor-checker-project/msg526087/#msg526087
      Some of the earlier info may be outdated as far as the specific limitations of the device. The functionality like test frequency are the things to focus on in these posts. Also the forum user named "Madires" is one of the two actual firmware developers. No one is more knowledgeable about the device than him.
      Of course all of this assumes you understand things like ADC= Analogue to Digital Converter and how these devices operate (I like Bill Herd's explanation of ADC's on HackaDay ;)

  • @julianblow4739
    @julianblow4739 Před 6 lety

    I'm putting the acrylic case on mine as I watch this video. Thanks EEV, great buy for the budget

  • @JustinDrentlaw
    @JustinDrentlaw Před 5 lety +1

    I really need one of these in my life. Awesome bit of kit.

  • @aszi77
    @aszi77 Před 6 lety +4

    If you press and hold the button a menu comes up with a number of functions including in-circuit ESR measurement for capacitors (without having to press the button each time), very useful.

    • @danielsaranovic9580
      @danielsaranovic9580 Před 6 lety

      Did u test the in-circuit ESR measurement ? What are the results is it really a 0.01 ohm resolution (or 0.1 Ohm depending on the version) ?

  • @stephtronix1811
    @stephtronix1811 Před 6 lety +30

    I recycle hold electronic parts and i really like that meter. It makes it faster to identify the components so i can class them where they belong :)

    • @Allan-mf1he
      @Allan-mf1he Před 4 lety +3

      Hey please do share some of your projects.

  • @soucevit
    @soucevit Před 6 lety

    Hi Dave, thanks for video about this tester. I bought one about year ago. It was also marketed as capable of in circuit measurement. I used it to troubleshoot faulty caps in power supplies and various faulty circuits. Until last week. In one cheap powerbrick, there was capacitor and diode combination on the output. One of these pulses this tester sends to tested component posibly came back with higher amplitude, or maybe capacitor was charged. Anyway by my lazines not to remove capacitor for measuring, ATMEGA8 is fried, while there is no isolation between component and procesor. So maybe this device is too simple. But anyway it bringed me lot of help with good/bad component troubleshooting.

  • @mlynch001
    @mlynch001 Před 6 lety +1

    These are amazing devices for the price. As a Component identifier, tester, looking for "Gross" failures, it is a winner. Helped me fix a couple of failed TM500 series plug-ins, so more than paid for itself. Thanks for another honest review. This is why we come here.

  • @pasixty6510
    @pasixty6510 Před 5 lety +5

    Although considering the (shown) weaknesses of this device, you get a considerably good tester for an unbeatable price. We absolutely don't talk about high end precision in this class of pricing or manufacturing. In most cases the precision of the device is good enough to help you find out what you have plugged into the socket. Me and my friends ordered those from China. We like them.

  • @MrMikeEdie
    @MrMikeEdie Před 6 lety +3

    I love it. So much I bought one. Not disappointed. It rocks!!! Cheers!

  • @WackyT08
    @WackyT08 Před rokem

    Have been using one of those for about the past 4 years, and it's been solid. Love it.

  • @ik04
    @ik04 Před 5 lety

    I have three of these. One was assembled and two were kits. They work flawlessly!

  • @FindLiberty
    @FindLiberty Před 6 lety +53

    I've had mine for several months; *cute!* _...added a power switch to prevent any parasitic sucking juice out of the 9v battery._

    • @aklef
      @aklef Před 6 lety +3

      Same!

    • @0xbenedikt
      @0xbenedikt Před 6 lety +6

      That's nice, although these devices have such a small parastic draw, that it is practically unnecessairy.

    • @IrishSkruffles
      @IrishSkruffles Před 6 lety +7

      I didn't have a spare 9V battery around so I used two 18650s in series, seems to work well so far :)

    • @John_Ridley
      @John_Ridley Před 6 lety +5

      Depends on the version you got. There were some versions that would kill a 9V battery in a couple of months or less.

    • @1djbecker
      @1djbecker Před 6 lety +1

      I have several versions. Even ones that are powered by a AA-sized lithium cell have the bad design of a resistive voltage divider before the power switch. That version mitigates the problem by a mechanical power switch and, of course, being able to recharge the battery.

  • @entidade1000
    @entidade1000 Před 4 lety +4

    lol it costs R$150 (usd 40) on average here in Brazil. You can get a Fluke multimeter for the same price range here too. Strange economics.

    • @entidade1000
      @entidade1000 Před 4 lety

      A A ill definitely check that out. Even if they tax me 200% it’s still a bargain

  • @tomaszkulawinski6388
    @tomaszkulawinski6388 Před 6 lety

    Huge thumbs up and purchased item before video ended... nice job Dave :) thanks

  • @johnlansing2902
    @johnlansing2902 Před 4 lety

    Thank you for a great addition to the toolbox

  • @matthewbolen7599
    @matthewbolen7599 Před 6 lety +3

    i've have the same exact one you showed there for about 6 months now....i salvage alot of parts.....this thing is the best tester in my shop when it comes to figuring out exactly what surface mount component i'm saving......

  • @bveina
    @bveina Před 6 lety +29

    We've just outfitted all our labs at my university with a variant of these. We use them as pinout checkers and magic smoke detectors. Saves tons of time helping students. I've also grabbed a 74xx chip tester for logic gates; same reason, check for the magic smoke.(no kid your chip isn't bad, you wiring is)

    • @Mythricia1988
      @Mythricia1988 Před 6 lety +4

      Oh I didn't know there were 74 series testers like that. I certainly could use one, because my wiring often is bad!

    • @bveina
      @bveina Před 6 lety +2

      Mythricia I've found two different models neither works for 100 percent of the series but they work well enough, and can be found from the usual overseas sources

    • @gorak9000
      @gorak9000 Před 6 lety

      You still use discrete 7400 logic chips? Heh, I TA'ed that class twice at 2 different universities, the second time it was all schematic capture and small fpga dev boards, and that was a number of years ago!

    • @Mythricia1988
      @Mythricia1988 Před 6 lety +10

      Well, as a hobbyist I rarely do things because they are practical or useful, using elementary logic is a lot more fun than just another microcontroller.

    • @noweare1
      @noweare1 Před 5 lety

      Nope

  • @BloodAsp
    @BloodAsp Před 6 lety

    I was literally just skimming through the mail bag and saw this at the end get tossed off. I don't have one, but I was surprised it was not known of, and at that minute I got the notification of this video. Good video!

  • @austinbartose6527
    @austinbartose6527 Před 4 lety +2

    That’s pretty sweet. I could us3 this at work quite effectively

  • @Edu_RJR
    @Edu_RJR Před 6 lety +27

    this was quick, I knew a lot of people would comment on this one, other electronic youtubers regularly use these

    • @zalmaflash
      @zalmaflash Před 6 lety +6

      I use mine all the time. It works fine for what it is. This isn't NASA.

    • @666Tomato666
      @666Tomato666 Před 6 lety +5

      yeah, well, Dave really didn't give it a proper chance in the previous video
      Very glad to see him own it up and do a proper test of it

    • @victornpb
      @victornpb Před 6 lety +2

      Yeah exactly, this is a componente identifier/tester, it is not a lab grade component characterizer. What people expect from a 7 dollar gadget...

    • @chrisakaschulbus4903
      @chrisakaschulbus4903 Před 6 lety

      thats normal thinking of modern people... it's like comaparing 200 dollar to some 20 dollar speakers and saying, that it it's automatically crap, just because it's not as good... it seems like people don't get price/performance

  • @SnarkyPosters
    @SnarkyPosters Před 6 lety +4

    Great now I'm buying another thing shown on this channel. That $25 multimeter works great. Thanks Dave.

    • @EngineeringVignettes
      @EngineeringVignettes Před 6 lety +1

      SnarkyPosters - It's ok... i got the multimeter too. It _is_ pretty good tho...
      - Eddy

    • @ncdave4life
      @ncdave4life Před 5 lety

      I have a Victor VC921, which is auto-ranging, *_very_* portable, runs on two AAA batteries, shuts off automatically to save the batteries, and is nicely protected in a strong hard-shell. The leads are a bit short, but, other than that, I like it a lot, and it's available on eBay for around $11, shipped:
      www.ebay.com/sch/i.html?_nkw=VICTOR+VC921

  • @kevincozens6837
    @kevincozens6837 Před 6 lety +1

    A while ago I bought one of the versions with a character based LCD display as I preferred its DUT connection method over one that uses a ZIF socket. I wasn't expecting it to be a precision device. Certainly handy to provide some basic information on the drawers full of miscellaneous transistors that I have acquired over the years.

  • @GraemeWoller
    @GraemeWoller Před 6 lety +1

    That was REALLY frigging interesting, bro. Awesome!

  • @Inspironator
    @Inspironator Před 6 lety +4

    If I had the money for all the accurate test equipment, then I would be one of the 2 percent. This kind of tester is a great deal for the majority of hobbyists. But, these should have a data sheet that tells their measurement range for different types of components. If they can spend the time to tweak the firmware, they can document and provide that document to compete head to head with the others.

  • @ElmerFuddGun
    @ElmerFuddGun Před 6 lety +12

    *I knew you would get "attacked" in the mailbag video for this!* LOL...

  • @iamdarkyoshi
    @iamdarkyoshi Před 6 lety

    These things are a MUST HAVE for anyone doing entry level repair for stuff like car amplifiers or power supplies
    Mine's a bit more expensive and its got a frequency generator/counter too.

  • @petti78
    @petti78 Před 6 lety

    I've used one very successfully to test dodgy electrolytics in various things and just checking if salvaged parts are reasonably good before putting them into the parts bin for possible use later. And it's just FUN!

  • @mik99D
    @mik99D Před 4 lety +8

    "Go. No go" That's an engineering measure one does not hear often.

  • @galileo_rs
    @galileo_rs Před 6 lety +3

    Get a version with a socketed atmega. Read the original documentation: www.mikrocontroller.net/articles/AVR_Transistortester. Pop in a 16Mhz crystal, replace the voltage reference ($2 directly from TI) and flash the latest firmware. It will measure sub pF and nH easily and fairly accurately.

  • @Jilocasindragon
    @Jilocasindragon Před 6 lety

    Thanks for being positively surprise and not shredding it to pieces beforehand :-) I know you can be a bit focused on high-pricy and heavy equipment at times. But for everyone who just started with electronics, this seems like a nice allround starter thingy until one can afford a proper meter.

  • @JerryEricsson
    @JerryEricsson Před 6 lety +1

    I picked one of these up a couple of years ago. She is a bit more refined then the one you reviewed, but not that much better..At any rate, two winters ago I got one of those little oscilloscope kits, complete with case and all. So, being in our Motor Home, some 1500 miles Southwest from my shop, I decided to assemble the kit on the booth of our RV, using a 5 volt portable soldering iron and that device identifier to sort and install the parts according to the chenglish almost instruction sheet, (Thank GOD it had photos of how it went together!) Well it never did work right, I guess, until last fall when I was typing my problem into a forum and read my own text, in which I discovered the problem. The rotary encoder was bad, I ordered in a new on, and now the little Oscope works just fine. A bit late because I had ordered a bit better kit, well larger not sure how much better, and have that one working like a champ as well, also using the little parts ID to sort the resistors instead of straining my old eyes trying to id those damn green-blue resistors that mask the true color of the bands. The second one came without a case so I ordered one separately. The outfit had to send me 3 damn cases before I got one that was not missing parts, or broken in shipment! I am a bit particular about such things even if it takes 30 days for the damn packages to get here from China.

  • @itsaustraliadayeveryday7234

    Hahaha "I'm not going to quibble over that?" yeh right Dave.

  • @marcc3516
    @marcc3516 Před 4 lety +3

    if you connect leads 1, 2, and 3 together and press the test button, does yours run a calibration dialog?

    • @Elektrobastler
      @Elektrobastler Před rokem

      Mine does, tried to measure an apparently fried thyristor that was fully conducting in any direction and it hopped into calib Mode.

  • @edmart3778
    @edmart3778 Před 9 měsíci +1

    6:31
    From product manual:
    "The turn-on or turn-off voltage of the mosfet must be less than 5V, otherwise the measured result is only its equivalent parameters (diodes, capacitors, etc.)."

  • @RijuChatterjee
    @RijuChatterjee Před 3 lety +1

    I did not know these existed, this is so frikin cool! I'm just recently learning that there is such a thing as open source hardware... fascinating and for some reason gives me a warm fuzzy feeling

  • @gtb81.
    @gtb81. Před 6 lety +4

    For 7.00 dollars, that's just brilliant, fricking brilliant

  • @Dansk55
    @Dansk55 Před 4 lety +3

    "It calibrates easily with shorting the three leads, then you'd need a ~10nF and a ~20pF capacitors, and it's done"

  • @electr0maker436
    @electr0maker436 Před 2 lety +1

    I really love the Mtester I have for a couple reasons. 1. It can auto identify transistor polarity and pinout, which is very useful for unknown components. 2. It can do inductance to some degree, which for a cheap device like this is invaluable. As a beginner myself I would fully recommend any beginner get one of these, especially if they can afford better test gear like me.
    The only quibble I have is that the socket is relatively fragile.

  • @fuentescgabriel
    @fuentescgabriel Před 6 lety

    Thank you VERY MUCH for this review.

  • @UpcycleElectronics
    @UpcycleElectronics Před 6 lety +5

    The AVR Transistor Tester project was started by Markus Frejek, Karl-Heinz Kübbeler, and the parallel firmware is done by Markus R. (Aka Madires) on the forum.
    The project is OSHW and is designed for you to build yourself. The Chinese clones are just substandard copies. None of the clones meet the minimum required specs from the documentation.

    • @mad_bad_cat
      @mad_bad_cat Před 6 lety +1

      Upcycle Electronics can you please link to that documentation so I can follow the instructions to build one for myself?

    • @UpcycleElectronics
      @UpcycleElectronics Před 6 lety +3

      MadComputerHal
      PDF Documentation from May 2017 (extracted from tarball and hosted for download):
      www.avrtester.tode.cz/upload/ttester_en.pdf
      Project Home Page:
      www.mikrocontroller.net/articles/AVR_Transistortester
      GNU Tarball Server:
      www.mikrocontroller.net/svnbrowser/transistortester/
      GIT Hub Copy of SVN Repo Server
      github.com/svn2github/transistortester/

  • @AttilaAsztalos
    @AttilaAsztalos Před 6 lety +45

    The thing is, 99.9% of the time 100 people out of 100 don't need to know the value of a component with any precision whatsoever, other then it being an actually functional part of the right kind, with a value on the order of magnitude you thought it was of.

    • @jasejj
      @jasejj Před 6 lety +5

      Attila Asztalos Exactly, when was the last time a hobbyist or repair tech needed to know a value to any greater accuracy than 10% in reality? $7 device = good enough for Australia, or anywhere else for that matter.

    •  Před 6 lety +4

      A repair tech might actually need precision. But hobbyists? Just knowing more or less what the component value is will almost always be enough!

    • @juliusvalentinas
      @juliusvalentinas Před 6 lety +2

      You don't need precision if all you build is LED clink circuits and alike. Shit tools makes same quality things.

    • @uK8cvPAq
      @uK8cvPAq Před 6 lety +2

      This. Also when I measure capacitors all I'm really looking for is if the capacitor is ok or needs to be replaced, the ESR and capacitance readings on this do the job just fine (after calibration).

    • @Soupie62
      @Soupie62 Před 5 lety +1

      I must be the 0.1% - I'm looking to test [and measure! ] hand-wound coils and transformers.

  • @rodneyalan6441
    @rodneyalan6441 Před 5 lety

    A most interesting idea. Just got an LCR meter but this would certainly help as eyesight starts to get tested on smaller coponents

  • @vaultdweller2511
    @vaultdweller2511 Před 6 lety

    I have a similar one (but with a somewhat different firmware). For the price a surprisingly useful tool for identifying pinouts or function of recycled semiconductors.

  • @GpanosXP
    @GpanosXP Před 6 lety +3

    10:09
    The body diode seems upside down.
    But it got it right the previous time.

    • @boggisthecat
      @boggisthecat Před 6 lety

      GpanosXP
      Good catch. I have two Chinese variants on these (cases, colour displays) and they can do some odd things like this. If you consider these devices to be quick-check component verification then they're perfectly usable. Where you really want to nail things down then you're going to have to break out serious tools, or spend a lot of time and effort.
      These would also be good projects for fiddling with, in themselves.

    • @dtrrtd774
      @dtrrtd774 Před 6 lety

      The orientation when you place it in the socket makes the difference. It bugs me to see, but it doesn't really matter as long as it identifies the drain and source pins correctly, which it does.
      The Daniu tester I bought for $30 doesn't have any errors that I know of; it's a more polished product but at 4x the price. Seeing the limitations makes me appreciate the more expensive item more; I bought that one first but then got a couple of the less expensive ones based on the low cost, thinking they'd be essentially the same, but it's not.

  • @victornpb
    @victornpb Před 6 lety +210

    Prices rising in 3, 2, 1...

    • @cbm80amiga
      @cbm80amiga Před 6 lety +6

      In Banggood this DMM is still at $17 in promo. Only eBay sellers rised prices.

    • @teslatrooper
      @teslatrooper Před 6 lety +1

      Just ordered one for ~€5.50 so I guess it didn't happen that fast. Useful little device especially once you replace some of the clone parts for higher precision ones.

    • @UpcycleElectronics
      @UpcycleElectronics Před 6 lety +3

      No clone meets the minimum system design of the project. AKA clones are junk...

    • @John_Ridley
      @John_Ridley Před 6 lety +3

      That mainly happens with used equipment, not new.

    • @CodeAsm
      @CodeAsm Před 6 lety +3

      prices drop ;)

  • @renekenshin6573
    @renekenshin6573 Před 5 lety

    I know this video is a year old now, but after watching this, I finally bought one which comes with a neat transparent case. I must say, this device is very helpful for me. I use it to measure capacitance and pin-outs of multi-pinned variable capacitors, also to test diodes and transistors which i can't identify. A very neat device for such a cheap price. A must have for technicians and electronic beginners. Thanks or this video Dave

  • @ciprianwinerElectronicManiac

    This great because I wanted to get one of these soon. Here it costs almost 20$. Thanks for sharing. Cheers:)

  • @SODA-iz8lc
    @SODA-iz8lc Před 6 lety +6

    Mine got a frequency tester and generator in as well. Just keep on pressing the button for about 5 sec and the menu will open.

  • @khronscave
    @khronscave Před 6 lety +3

    15:04 In AvE parlance, that would be a "sore dick deal" (ie. "can't be beat")...

  • @ryancl03
    @ryancl03 Před 6 lety

    thanks for reviewing this, been meaning to buy one...

  • @joeyscott4299
    @joeyscott4299 Před 5 lety +1

    Cool!!! Thanks for the vid ! I'm going to order one of these guys

  • @troywinterbourn564
    @troywinterbourn564 Před 6 lety +14

    Nice save .

  • @stevejones8665
    @stevejones8665 Před 6 lety +7

    Yes Those German's who Bombed our Chippy,s did an absolutely fantastic job with the firmware and software development for this device . Thumbs up and hats off to them. .It can also be re programmed with the latest software...Also they are very accurate when calibrated first...

  • @Clarkephix
    @Clarkephix Před 6 lety

    I have got the same thing it on my work desk for 2 years and It's very useful, especially when you have many things to solder on PCB . Chinese manufacturers made it for 10 usd, including plastic case .

  • @PiccsChannel
    @PiccsChannel Před 6 lety

    Nice, totally picking one of these up

  • @alien8r33d
    @alien8r33d Před 6 lety +21

    These ZIF sockets never actually say 'TEXTOOL'. If you look closely you notice that one of the letter 'O's has been changed, usually to a D or a Q.

    • @EEVblog
      @EEVblog  Před 6 lety +13

      LOL! Didn't notice that

    • @UpcycleElectronics
      @UpcycleElectronics Před 6 lety +1

      Some people on the forums have said they had these fail. I don't know if the real ones create the same kind of stress for the pins that attach the ZIF socket, but the copy I have creates a lot of movement and stress on the pins/PCB/pads. Place the loose ZIF socket on a PCB, and try to hold it in place while pulling the lever. It really wants to move around with considerable force.

    • @Knaeckebrotsaege
      @Knaeckebrotsaege Před 6 lety +1

      On all of the ones I've seen so far it always says TFXTDOL ... the one in this video included :D

    • @UpcycleElectronics
      @UpcycleElectronics Před 6 lety +1

      John Howard
      That's what I assumed as well. It looks to me like the pins have some leverage motion to them as well. It practically guarantees long term problems of lifting pads/traces, especially with inexperienced diy'ers and flux core solder alone.

    • @userPrehistoricman
      @userPrehistoricman Před 6 lety +1

      My transistortester came with a 3M socket, no textool marking. I can't remember but it may have also had moving PCB pins

  • @stonent
    @stonent Před 6 lety +7

    I'd be tempted to try things like two diodes together, 1 to 2 and 2 to 3, connecting parts of logic gates just to see what it does.

    • @nrdesign1991
      @nrdesign1991 Před 6 lety +6

      Two diodes work, e.g. a bi-color LED in 2- and 3-pin configuration

    • @airthrow
      @airthrow Před 6 lety +2

      stonent it's actually really fun to see what they can and cannot identify. Linear voltage regulators, no dice, which isnt surprising really

    • @stonent
      @stonent Před 6 lety +1

      Yeah I suspect they don't put out very much voltage in order to lower the risk of damaging something. So it may not be enough anyway to power up a 7805 fully. Maybe 7803 might trigger something.

    • @dtrrtd774
      @dtrrtd774 Před 6 lety +2

      The higher cost version can test a 30V Zener too, which the $7 one won't be capable of.

  • @DoktorJeep
    @DoktorJeep Před 3 lety +1

    I got one of these. I would not use it for a "final say" but it's a handy little bugger to just check stuff on the fly and answer the "what is that" situation. They don't work well on hall effect sensors when you don't have a magnet.

  • @69Dartman
    @69Dartman Před rokem

    Thanks to seeing this video just today I ordered one of the latest versions with a color oled display in a case with test leads and some misc parts to test it with. 21.84 shipped from New Jersey to my place in Portland Oregon. I remember trying to find a capacitor tester back in the day and I have a couple transistor testers but not a all in one unit with a nice display. Of course back then there weren't any, at least none I could afford.
    I might not use it a lot now but I still fix my own stuff when it breaks and this will be so handy.
    It can even show remote IR wave forms and has a rechargeable battery built in.

  • @AxelWerner
    @AxelWerner Před 6 lety +6

    As you Said, there are hundred Models Out there, Not everyone is good. Not everyone is Software upgradeable. So which Version ist Worth buying if one needs a good esr Meter and what is hackable/ upgradeable???!

    • @SONOFAZOMBIE2025
      @SONOFAZOMBIE2025 Před 6 lety

      Axel Werner also interested.

    • @uK8cvPAq
      @uK8cvPAq Před 6 lety +1

      If you need a good ESR meter than I would just go for an official ESR tester. These things are good but its really easy to accidentally kill them with a charged capacitor and sometimes long test leads can make the ESR test vary wildly.

    • @jonandersonmd7994
      @jonandersonmd7994 Před 5 lety

      today ebay showed one for $2.42 .. but i didnt notice if that was Aussie$ or USD's ... If it's Aussie, then the USD price would be .. lemme thing: ya, they have to put $1 in the package for you ... !!

  • @ChipGuy
    @ChipGuy Před 6 lety +4

    The first idea was mentioned in Elektor Magazine in April 2005 and used a PIC processor AFAIK. It never took off, because of some dumb issues it had. Aparently all these chinese ones originated from a second design first posted on the german forum microcontroller.net. That is something like your EEVBlog forum, but much smaller since it's main language is german. www.mikrocontroller.net/articles/AVR_Transistortester

  • @WS-gw5ms
    @WS-gw5ms Před 6 lety

    This is cool AF. I need one of these for when I take apart old electronics.

  • @SNAKERADIOS
    @SNAKERADIOS Před 5 lety

    I use this every day it is close enough for what i do . Thank you

  • @ooltimu
    @ooltimu Před 6 lety +3

    Can't believe Dave is impressed by a Chinese diy kit :)))

    • @EEVblog
      @EEVblog  Před 6 lety +9

      I'm impressed by what the firmware is capable of

    • @robbyxp1
      @robbyxp1 Před 6 lety +5

      It does have German Software in it ;-)

    • @voldy3565
      @voldy3565 Před 5 lety

      oh shut up

  • @SnarkyPosters
    @SnarkyPosters Před 6 lety +3

    Anyone got a link to a good one on Aliexpress?

  • @JerryEricsson
    @JerryEricsson Před 6 lety

    I have had one of these little toys in my kit for over 2 years now, and get a lot of use out of her. Since my income crashed last spring, and came out at 1/2 what I was making, the purchase of new parts has become a sort of thing of the past. Thankfully I have picked up several kits of cheap china crapware resistor packs, capacitor packs, and hundreds of LED's with a good selection of boards to build on so I can still have some fun. That said though, getting exotic parts has come to an end, and I have relegated to tearing down old power supplies and old PC Motherboards to supplement my parts bins. This little guy has become invaluable for such projects! I am considering soldering some leads on the external pads so I can expand the reach of the testing, as I rarely use it for smd parts and I do have some nice alligator clips that would work fairly well for that purpose. I did use it once for a large kit build a few years ago when I could still afford to buy a kit, and built up one of those cheap toy oscilloscopes using the tester to sort out all the parts since all the resistors were of the ugly blue/green type that strained my ancient eyes to try to determine the colors, this device paid for herself in just that one built! I have never built up a box for her, and I doubt I will ever get one now since groceries have a much higher precedence then electronics now days, and I do hate having the bill collectors at my doorstep, so much work scaring them away when I answer the door in my tight jocky shorts with a pistol belt around my waste and my old M1911A1 hanging from it in a military style holster. Seems they never return, and all I have to say is that they will have to wait their turn. (Just kidding, it isn't that bad yet, but my nightmares do offer great fodder for such ideas) Your breakdown on this deal is right on, I love my little device so much she occupies a nice cardboard box that a survival knife came in, the knife was crap but it had a nice box, almost worth the 5 bucks I gave for it at a roadside stand on RT 66 in Arizona a couple of years ago.

  • @rickgoebel6724
    @rickgoebel6724 Před 6 lety

    This is amazing that you can get so much for so little. Thanks Dave for doing this video.

  • @EngiMeer
    @EngiMeer Před 5 lety +4

    Hey Dave! I'm doing a cool new mod kit for this already handy little device ! Here are a few of my ideas :
    1) bin the 9v battery and the 7805 (I'll just hit em with hot air and wipe them off) then fit a nice lithium ion battery pack and a regulated charging board with a micro usb connection .
    2) I've already 3d printed a really nice case for it which is much thinner so much more 'nerd shirt pocket friendly!' o_O
    3) Modify the firmware! Why? Because I can! .lol Seriously though ... Although this is a great bit of kit AS-IS outta the box, I have found some discrepancies between my expensive proper equipment and this little gadget , of course! What do you expect for only $12 or less ???
    They (we?) are already making this little Atmel stand on it's head and do tricks ! It takes quite a bit of m0jO to do all those a/d / d/a routines to work those FETs to get some great sampling nearly maxing out the capability of this little Atmel's resolution .. With that being said, I have gone over the code and patched it here and there to be a bit more accurate in some spots.. ;) Mainly, with the FET's and the gain! Resistors, caps , didoes, and general NPN or PNP transistors seem to be testing fairly accurate ... but as you know some FETs are sensitive lil buggers....
    4) Other ideas that may or may not ever be implemented, but. I'm just tossing them out there to see what people might think would make it a bit better ! (Please post /share your own ideas on how it may be improved in the comments below) :
    4a) Perhaps shitbin the whole board and lcd display design and just make a whole new much smaller PCB with just enough space to fit the atmel , the few support components , the zif socket and smd test pad .. and wire up a touch screen TFT display along with a micro SD slot so you may be able to store certain data on the components you test .. For example: you may want to test a bunch of FET's and perhaps pair them with others of similar gain .. or perhaps for quality control of some sort ie: run through a batch of parts and perhaps calculate a mean value of those that are within spec or tolerance and alert you if the next one you test is a bit off ...
    4b) add wifi capability to the design so you may interface with your pc or other device to acquire and store that data in a database for whatever reason a tech or engineer may see fit for whatever reason ...........
    4c) Perhaps expand the zif socket size to at least 18 pins and along with the wifi interface as mentioned above, implemented,.. Perhaps be able to flash microcontrollers with a bin over wifi from your pc or other device!
    Just a few ideas I'mm tossing out there... let me know what you think .....
    Cheers,
    Kixxy o_O

    • @Zodosh1
      @Zodosh1 Před 4 lety

      And there goes the $7 price point

  • @djtoddles8750
    @djtoddles8750 Před 5 lety +3

    Can this thing test ICs, like a 555 timer or other small ICs like a a 4011 nand gate or 4049 hex inverter for example?
    btw Dave, thanks for another bang on video. Yahoo seriously mate, turn up the ride and throw another shrimp on the barbie, b/c this vlog makes me smile more than a vegemite sandwich, just bang on mate. (I would have added "that's not a knife ... now THIS is a knife," but no one under 40 would get the reference)

  • @xxycom8963
    @xxycom8963 Před 4 lety

    EEVblog, nice video. I wish one of these days you will put one of these “ component sorter” LCR meters through its paces in a in-circuit scenario. There seems to be too much emphasis in high accuracy, when most circuit components are specified as +- 5%, or even sometimes +- 20%. I want any of your video watchers to raise there hand and tell me that they do LCR filter designs and they need high accuracy. If this “component sorter” LCR meter can be used in sorting bad/good component in repair/maintenance work, then it is an invaluable tool.

  • @stijnbagin
    @stijnbagin Před 6 lety

    I have one of these too. Pretty good imo. Tests just about anything and it is pretty accurate. Cool for troubleshooting in circuit too. Just watch out for those loaded capacitors.

  • @peekpt
    @peekpt Před 6 lety +11

    You can calibrate it short the 3 pin

    • @TheDrQuake
      @TheDrQuake Před 6 lety +2

      Thats not enough. Exact procedure desribed in project manual mentioned there many times.

    • @UpcycleElectronics
      @UpcycleElectronics Před 6 lety +3

      ...but there's more....
      In the official PDF the ATmega644/1284 Schematic shows the option to add a auto calibration feature using 2 spare pins, a 100nF capacitor and a 470k resistor. Others have suggested using a single pin to control a double pole relay that achieves the same thing by connecting the calibration circuit.

  • @Vinnidict
    @Vinnidict Před 6 lety +3

    What happens if you test a component tester with another component tester?

  • @richfiles
    @richfiles Před 6 lety +1

    I love my component tester as a simple double check before soldering ass saver. On more than one occasion, I've been unsure of the pinout of a given part. It saves me from digging up a datasheet for it on the computer, but more importantly, lets me confirm at the workbench, letting me install and solder in a part with the confidence I'm not going to do some idiotic move like put a transistor in backwards. Nice to characterize SMD caps too, since those are typically unlabeled.

  • @greekstraycats
    @greekstraycats Před rokem

    Found this about history (instructables):
    Ideas behind this kit is started in 2009 by Markus Frejek as a thread on a forum.
    Later (in 2012) Karl-Heinz Kübbeler started to work on the project.
    this project continued to be more known, it was implemented in various forms over the time. Some enthusiasts have made it on breadboard, some have designed their own PCB's, single or dual layer; with thru-hole or SMD components... and so on.
    Also, over the time, have appeared variants with graphic display.
    The original diagram released by Markus in 2009 is what they still use 2023... There just some optimizations about 9V battery power supply and other displays. Original display was a HD44780 16x2 LCD.

  • @GeorgeGraves
    @GeorgeGraves Před 6 lety +13

    How the heck did you miss the 8th all-time most popular thread on your own forum? Part of me thinks this is a ruse.

    • @domino52o26
      @domino52o26 Před 5 lety +2

      Nope, he's just a self unaware, pretentious snob

  • @DeeegerD
    @DeeegerD Před 6 lety +7

    Been around for years. Dave's late to the party ;)

  • @freereacher
    @freereacher Před 3 lety

    I got one of these ages ago but mine was faulty. It turned out to be a bonus because I had to fix it! When I got it working it became pretty useful to identify parts quickly

  • @hosseinhayati9820
    @hosseinhayati9820 Před 6 lety

    Thanks for sharing :) Ordered one ;)