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Put a 1 ohm resistor across the meter probe connectorsHe's looking to meter "
equipment ie: drill press, saws, hand drills, grinders, guitar amps, pa amps etc.". If he has a strong table-saw and pushes a chunk of knotty oak hard, it will pull 25 Amps. With 1 ohm the 120V drops toward 95V and the 1-ohm's dissipation goes up toward 600 Watts.
Yes this could only be a short-term thing. A hard-pressed home saw will kick-out on overheat or on cellar fuse. This is just the kind of thing _I_ might want to know: is the saw weak or am I asking more current than my wiring is good for?
Adding another 1 ohm skews the situation somewhat. The saw will be weaker but it may appear to pull only an "OK" current instead of fuse-popping current.
And it seems that any of the proposed test items can, when pushed, pull enough current to smoke any 1-ohm resistor found in amp shops. If we have to buy, we also have the option to pick a lower-value resistor. I remember when <0.1r was large/custom, now 0.005r is standard stuff, 0.01r makes mental math easier.
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This is what I use around my shop: http://www.thinkgeek.com/gadgets/travelpower/7657/THAT'S the one I was trying to think of.
$25 is an excellent price. ThinkGeek are good folks.
For $25 I think pre-made is much safer than working with wall-wires.
The instant Volts Amps Watts VA PF readings are handy. But the KWH is wonderful. If you run a 100 Watt lamp for 10 hours it says 1KWH (1,000WH), so what? But put it on your table saw. It pulls say 300 Watts idling, 3,000 Watts on an oak knot.... are you paying for 300 or 3,000?? I think for any non-factory use, this meter will show a table-saw is a lot closer to 300 than to 3,000 KW per hour.