ITTSB.EU Blog Forum
Electrical Test and Measurement instruments => Bench-top multimeter => Topic started by: Kiriakos GR on June 01, 2026, 04:52:57 PM
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ATE automated testing systems, this is another application and or a good customer of electrical T&M sector.
This is actually the one called as B2B relation with an electrical T&M brand and a private company, developer or a factory.
FLUKE 45 bench-top DMM this historically become the FIRST product solution this adopted at automated testing systems.
FLUKE 8842A this came to replace FLUKE 45, and at 2006 the FLUKE 8845A and 8846A these came to replace anything older.
ATE automated testing system, this is a system, it can contain lots of hardware and lots of software, it can be a large scale data logger.
It can be also planed this to be a constant PASS/FAIL inspection system.
First rule since day one, this is system longevity and reliability.
This is of how Japanese quality of electrolytic capacitors, these earned their stripes.
High end Japanese electrolytic capacitors they have no issue operating 24/24 for ten years or more.
I have no clues if at 2026, ATE automated testing systems, this is an still booming sector?
All that I know this is fresh recorded facts.
FLUKE Corporation this when out.
Keysight this stays in.
HIOKI this stays in.
At March 2026 SIGLENT China, this hopes to get in.
SIGLENT hates using Japanese capacitors, and quality parts made by foreign brands. :P
In other words, SIGLENT this is unable to compete, at international markets, and possibly hopes in 20 years from now, this to become a dominant brand within in China.
Regarding visual recognition of what is classified, as ATE Ready... these are DMM those having inputs at FRONT and BACK.
Test leads inputs at the back, this translates to a clean look at the front of a cabinet /rack mount box.
When old ATE automated testing system, this gets dismantled.
The outcome is several DMM units with destroyed LCD or VFD display, these become available at eBay.
Usually these products suffer from much more unseen problems.
Dirt, rust, poor storage in humidity, violent dismantling by low paid workers.
This story is always the same, no matter of ATE system origin, USA, EU, China, and therefore at 85% of cases, such finds they are not treasure.