- FLUKE 289, shows message warning leads connected incorrectly . . . - EEVblog
I have a FLUKE 289, shows message "warning leads connected incorrectly", I have detected that it is by the device O27, please I will appreciate if you can indicate which is the device code to replace it
- EEVblog 1692 – $130 Fluke 17B MAX Multimeter REVIEW
Is a US$130 Fluke multimeter any good? A review of the Fluke 17B MAX Multimeter Forum: https: www e
- Fluke 199C scopemeter repair - Page 1 - EEVblog
Author Topic: Fluke 199C scopemeter repair (Read 60445 times) 0 Members and 1 Guest are viewing this topic
- I need to know the History of FLUKE 87 ( 1988 - 2010 ) - Page 1 - EEVblog
I don't remember when the original Fluke 87 came in, but I thought it was a bit earlier than 96? The original took the market by storm, and is what cemented it as probably the #1 general use industrial meter I don't ever remember seeing an 87-II anywhere, although I guess maybe there was one at one point, at least internally at Fluke?
- Fluke 190 II Windows 10, Windows 11, x64 drivers - Page 1 - EEVblog
Author Topic: Fluke 190 II Windows 10, Windows 11, x64 drivers (Read 3065 times) 0 Members and 2 Guests are viewing this topic
- Fluke 199C scopemeter repair - Page 5 - EEVblog
Author Topic: Fluke 199C scopemeter repair (Read 56000 times) 0 Members and 4 Guests are viewing this topic
- Old Fluke Multimeters - Page 1 - EEVblog
At Fluke I worked on the 8020A, 8020B, 8024B, 8026B, 8010A, 8012A, 8920, 8922, and a few miscellaneous projects I spend a lot of time developing a Digital Readout Power Supply, at the time quite innovative, but Fluke decided that HP (now Agilent) dominated that market and dropped the project
- Fluke vs Amprobe - Page 1 - EEVblog
Fluke was (and for the most part, still is) the holy grail of handheld test equipment They've developed an amazing reputation Unfortunately, hobbyists and professionals alike can not always afford such test equipment, though we want something we can trust If you want to stick with the Fluke "brand", there's something called Amprobe, which is, I guess, Fluke's "value" subsidiary
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