On Fri, 2012-02-17 at 22:55 +0000, Fons Adriaensen wrote: > * There are quite good handheld audio RMS meters which don't > cost a fortune (but they are in the higher price range). > They use analog integrated circuits which can be quite > accurate - at least for normal audio use. They are not > laboratory standards of course.
Still very expensive. I only own an elCheapo multimeter, just good for coarse measurements. If I have trouble at home where something better is needed, I ask a friend who owns a measuring bridge and several oscilloscopes etc., if I do a job and something is "really" broken, in other words more than just a controlable voltage stabilizer needs to be calibrated, I ask to give it to a workshop. IMO it's not only expensive to own all the gear that sometimes is needed, it also takes too much space. If equipment is seldom used, it tends to fail at the moment it's needed. IMO an averaged audio engineer who does mixing, wiring and repairs without a big fuss, doesn't need such gear. - Ralf OT: I would like to own a Hameg oscilloscope with the so called "Komponententester" (translated perhaps something like "semiconductor tester"). I wonder if there's any other company offering this. _______________________________________________ Linux-audio-dev mailing list [email protected] http://lists.linuxaudio.org/listinfo/linux-audio-dev
