How To Use Multimeter
How To Use Multimeter
Guide Contents 2
Overview 3
What to look for? 3
Other Useful Resources 3
Continuity 4
What is Continuity? 4
What is it good for? 4
Remember! 4
Get Into the Mode 4
First step is to get your multimeter into the correct mode. Look for the icon that looks sort of like a 'sound wave' 4
Touch and Go 5
Example 1 5
Example 2 7
Example 3 8
Probing a PCB 10
Resistance 12
What is Resistance? 12
Resistor Coding 12
What is resistance testing good for? 13
Remember! 13
Get into the mode. 13
Ranging vs. Auto-Ranging 14
Example 1: Testing a Resistor 15
Example 2: Testing a Potentiometer 18
Example 3: Testing a Sensor 20
Voltage 22
What is Voltage? 22
AC/DC 22
What is voltage testing good for? 23
Remember! 23
Get into the right mode. 24
Example 1: Testing Batteries 26
Example 2: Testing wall wart (adapter) plugs 31
Bonus Example: Testing a circuit with AC and DC 37
Current 41
What is current? 41
I = V/R 41
P=IxV 41
Why Measure Current? 41
Pick a safe range. 42
Choose the right connections. 44
Get in the loop! 50
Breaking the circuit: 51
Closing the loop 53
Well, since they're rather commodified (there are dozens of manufacturers) it is hard to make everyone use the same
model, even though it would make things easier.
These are things that I rarely (if ever) use, in descending order
For some basic circuits you can just look to see where the wires go to determine continuity but it's always wise to use
a multimeter. Sometimes wires break or you're tired and can't easily follow all the PCB traces. I use continuity check all
the time!
Remember!
You can only test continuity when the device you're testing is not powered. Continuity works by poking a little voltage
into the circuit and seeing how much current flows, its perfectly safe for your device but if its powered there is already
voltage in the circuit, and you will get incorrect readings
Always test to make sure your meter is working before starting the test by brushing the two tips together, and verifying
you hear the beep. Maybe the battery is low or its not in the right mode.
Continuity is non-directional, you can switch probes and it will be the same.
If you are testing two points in a circuit and there is a (big) capacitor between those points you may hear a quick beep
and then quiet. That's because the voltage the meter is applying to the circuit is charging up the capacitor and during
that time the meter 'thinks' its continuous (essentially)
Small resistors (under 100 ohms or so) and also all inductors will seem like short circuits to a multimeter because they
are very much like wires.
Likewise, continuity doesn't mean "short" it just means very very low resistance. For example, if you have a circuit that
draws an Amp from a 5V supply, it will appear to be a 5Ω resistor. If you measure that with your meter it will think its a
short circuit, but really its just a high-drain circuit.
Touch and Go
For a majority of multimeters, you're ready to go, just touch the tips of the probes together so that they make a
beeping sound!
Here's a video demonstration:
Example 1
When you touch the tips together, the display changes to a three digit mode (it's displaying resistance, which we will
cover later) It also emits a beep.
When you touch the probes, the soundwave icon shows up in the display (upper right) and it also shows a number.
The number is not the resistance, actually…its the voltage (look for the V in the right hand side for Volts). This is
because this mode is also a Diode Test (which will be discussed later).
Unlike the other meter, this one displays Ohms (see the symbol on the right of the display). The resistance is low
(4.7Ohms) but not 0 (the ideal value) because the probes and wires act as resistors. Usually with these sorts of meters
Probing a PCB
Here is an example of testing a PCB for continuity.The first test shows that the two points are not connected.
The second test shows that these two points are connected.
Resistor Coding
Resistors are color coded, at first it seems like a bad way to print the values but with a little time it becomes faster
because you dont have to read any numbers and the stripes are visible no matter how it is rotated. You can use this
calculator to play around with resistor color codes (https://adafru.it/aIp).
Remember!
You can only test resistance when the device you're testing is not powered. Resistance testing works by poking a
little voltage into the circuit and seeing how much current flows, its perfectly safe for any component but if its powered
there is already voltage in the circuit, and you will get incorrect readings
You can only test a resistor before it has been soldered/inserted into a circuit. If you measure it in the circuit you will
also be measuring everything connected to it. In some instances this is OK but I would say that in the vast majority it is
not. If you try, you will get incorrect readings and that's worse than no reading at all.
You can make sure your meter is working well by having a 'reference resistor' to test against. A 1% 1KΩ or 10KΩ
resistor is perfect! Low batteries can make your multimeter wonky.
Resistance is non-directional, you can switch probes and the reading will be the same.
If you have a ranging meter (as most inexpensive ones are), you'll need to keep track of what range you are in.
Otherwise, you will get strange readings, like OL or similar, or you may think you're in KΩ when really you're in MΩ.
This is a big problem for beginners so be careful!
This meter has the Ω symbol and then 5 submodes, ranging from 200Ω to 2MΩ
This meter has a multi-mode (you need to press a seperate MODE button to change between capacitor sense, diode
test, resistor test and continuity!) It does not, however, have any numbered submodes, as it is auto-ranging.
Which takes about 4 seconds to settle on a final value, and a 10KΩ resistor with a ranging meter:
Which gets the first significant digit instantly, the second digit after 1 second and the final digit after 2.
Expensive autoranging meters, like Fluke 73s, will be super fast so it's not a big deal, but if you have a $200 meter
you're probably not reading this tutorial.
Ranges will almost always be something like 200Ω, 2KΩ, 20KΩ, 200KΩ, 2MΩ, etc. Why the 2s instead of 100, 1K, 10K
etc.? Well, here's my guess.
1.0K, 1.1K, 1.2K, 1.3K, 1.5K, 1.6K, 1.8K, 2.0K, 2.2K, 2.4K, 2.7K, 3.0K, 3.3K, 3.6K, 3.9K, 4.3K, 4.7K, 5.1K, 5.6K, 6.2K, 6.8K, 7.5K,
8.2K, 9.1K
There are way more values between 1KΩ and 2KΩ than between 2KΩ and 3KΩ, etc. By picking 2KΩ as your max
range, you get the best precision for the most probable values.
And this 10KΩ is really 9.80KΩ. Note that the numbers look similar but the decimal point has moved.
Now testing a different resistor, we will again guess its under 2KΩ. However, this time we get a strange response,
a 1. which means out of range. Some meters will display an OL which you may remember from the continuity secion as
meaning "open loop" here it means "the measurement is higher than the range".
Its a little clumsier than auto-ranging but if you are pretty sure you know about how big the resistance you are
expecting is, its very speedy.
You can also use a multimeter to tell whether the potentiometer is a linear or logarithmic (audio) pot. When the pot is
centered, if the resistance between the wiper and one end is half of the total value, its linear. (I used clips instead of
probles to make it easier to take these photos).
This video shows the resistance of a 10KΩ linear pot as it is adjusted. At the end it is set to approximately the midd,
which is measured at 4.7KΩ, pretty close to the 'ideal' of 5KΩ.
Minimum is 0Ω as expected
If, when centered, the resistance is more like 85% or 15% of the total resistance, then its a log pot. This is a 50KΩ
analog potentiometer. When centered, the resistance is about 8KΩ.
First, set the range, in this case 20KΩ seems pretty good. In bright light, it measures about 610 Ω
Some people like to draw an analogy to water (https://adafru.it/aIv) to describe voltage. A water pump is like a voltage
supply (https://adafru.it/aIw)(also known as a battery).
The pump pushes water through a hydraulic system, and the voltage supply pushes electrons through an electronic
system.
The higher the rated pressure of the pump, the more 'work' the water can do.
Likewise, the higher the voltage the more 'work' (Watts) the electrons can do.
Voltage is used to provide power (via a battery or wall plug) and its also used as a way of transmitting data. For
example, music is recorded from a microphone as an analog voltage signal, if that voltage waveform is applied to a
speaker the voltage performs the work of making air move and produces sound.
Voltage is also used to in digital circuits to talk back and forth in binary, usually 5V or 3.3V is a "1" and 0V is a "0", by
alternating the 1's and 0's millions of times a second, data can be moved around rather quickly.
AC/DC
Not just an 80's hair metal band! Voltage comes in two flavors (yum): Alternating Current (AC) and Direct Current (DC).
Here is a quick tour of the differences.
Direct current voltage is what comes out of batteries. The battery is at 9V, and it pretty much keeps that voltage
constant, until it dies. The chemical reactions inside the battery creates DC voltage.
Electronic circuits really like DC voltage.
Alternating current voltage is what comes out of the wall. We call it 120 VAC (Volts Alternating Current) because the
generator at the US power plant creates a voltage that oscillates (alternates). At the outlet in your home, the voltage
is not constant but goes from about -120V to 0 to +120V to 0 again, 60 times a second. In Europe, it's referred to as
240VAC because the voltage goes from about -240V to +240V at 50 times a second.
Technically the voltage is truly +170V to -170V in the US, which would make 120VAC we're mentioning -> 340Volts
peak to peak. Since multimeters tend to show RMS voltages, its easier to just refer to it as 120VAC and remember that
the peak postive and negative voltage are each ~1.5x the RMS voltage and the peak-to-peak is going to be ~3x as
what the multimeter is displaying for sinusoidal/wall outlet waveforms! You can read all about peak to peak vs RMS
voltages here (https://adafru.it/oDb)
AC voltage is great for power plants because its easy to transform AC voltages (using
a transformer (https://adafru.it/aIf) ) up to 50KVAC for long distance travel and then down to 240VAC or 120VAC to
safely power your home. Those big honking grey things that you see next to buildings that hum are the huge
transformers.
Motors (like your washing machine and refrigerator compressor pump) also like running off of AC voltage.
You can turn AC voltage into DC voltage very easily by using a very small transformer to bring the 120VAC down to a
reasonable level like say 16VAC and then rectify it (https://adafru.it/aIx). This is basically what's inside a wall wart
plug (https://adafru.it/aIy) or your laptop power supply.
Its much harder to turn DC into AC, you will need an inverter which are more expensive than transformers/rectifiers.
Batteries only supply DC voltage and wall plugs only supply AC voltage. However, it is totally possible to haveboth AC
and DC voltage at a certain point:
If an AC voltage is oscillating between -60V and +60V it has 120Vpp AC and 0V DC because theaverage voltage of -
In the above oscilloscope image, the dashed horizontal line in the center is ground (0V) and each dashed division is
5V. The scope is displaying a signal that has both AC and DC components. There is an alternating voltage (a square
wave) that is about 4V high at about 100Hz and a DC (mean average) voltage that is around 7V. Use the dashed
divisions to verify for yourself that this is so.
Remember!
You can only test voltage when the ciruit is powered If there is no voltage coming in (power supply) then there will be
no voltage in the circuit to test! It must be plugged in (even if it doesn't seem to be working)
Voltage is always measured between two points There is no way to measure voltage with only one probe, it is like
trying to check continuity with only one probe. You must have two probes in the circuit. If you are told to test at a
point or read the voltage at this or that location what it really means is that you should put the negative (reference,
ground, black) probe at ground (which you must determine by a schematic or somewhere else in the instructions) and
the positive (red) probe at the point you would like to measure.
If you're getting odd readings, use a reference voltage (even a 9V battery is a reasonable one) to check your voltage
readings. Old meter batteries and wonky meters are the bane of your existence but they will eventually strike! Good
places to take reference voltages are regulated wall plugs such as those for cell phones. Two meters might also be
good :)
DC voltage and AC voltage are very different Make sure you are testing the right kind of voltage. This may require
pressing a mode button or changing the dial.
Multimeters have different input impedences that affect readings of high impedence circuits For example, measuring
a sensor that has 1Mohm impedence with a 1Mohm impedence meter will give you only half the correct reading
This meter has the double line for DC voltage, and 5 ranges, from 200mV to 600V. The lightning bolt symbol is a
gentle reminder that this voltage is extremely dangerous.
There is also the V-wave symbol for AC, and two ranges since most AC voltages that are measured are power voltages
and are pretty big. (For small AC waveforms, a scope is best since you will be able to see the waveform itself).
This ranged meter has 5 ranges, the top range is 750 VAC or 1000 VDC, to switch between DC and AC you need to
press the DC/AC button on the upper right.
When the probes are not connected to anything, they should display 0V. They might flicker a bit if they pick up
ambient voltage (your home is a big radiator of 60Hz voltage which can couple into your meter probes).
Using this graph you can easy tell how fresh your battery is and how long you can expect it to last.
Next, we measure a 9V alkaline battery. If we still have the range set to 2VDC we will get a mysterious "1. " display,
indicating is it over-range.
For this new battery we get 9.6V. Remember that battery voltage is nominal, which means that the "9V" is just
the average voltage of the battery. In reality, it starts out as high as 9.5V and then drops down to 9 and then slowly
drifts to 7V. You can check out the discharge curve in the Duracell 9V datasheet (https://adafru.it/egb)
If we fix the range so it's 2VDC, we can get an extra digit of precision. This meter probably isnt more than 0.5%
accurate so the precision may not mean much.
Since the output is unregulated, the voltage supplied will droop as more current is pulled from it, which means that
open-circuit (connected to nothing) the measured output can be as high as 14V. Our power supply tutorial on
transformer-based wall adapters covers this in detail (https://adafru.it/aMF)
Note that it says Switching (not Transformer) on the label, and you can input US or European power. Like the
transformer adapter, it is center-positive polarity.
Lastly, we'll test a 9VAC adaptor, which outputs AC voltage instead of DC. Basically this means that there's still a
transformer inside, but no rectifier. This is also an unregulated supply.
Note again that the label says transformer. It requires 120VAC input, US power only. The nominal output is 9VAC at
300mA. The output is indicated twice, once at the top "AC/AC" and then again in the output designator "9V AC"
There is no polarity because AC adaptors are not polarized: AC power oscillates between positive and negative
We test the output, but get 0V! That's when we remember that the multimeter has to be in AC voltage mode.
Switching over to AC, we get a good reading, 10.5VAC. This is an unregulated supply so again we are going to get a
voltage higher than 9V.
The DC portion is the easy part to measure, most multimeters just average out the input measurement.
However, when trying to measure AC, this multimeter gives us a seemingly random number. (Maybe the DC voltage *
I = V/R
P=IxV
Where 'P' is power (measured in Watts), 'I' is current and 'V' is voltage.
Watts is a measure of work, or the conversion of electrical energy into some other form such as heat, light or motion.
As the equation implies, it takes both voltage and current to do work.
If there is not enough current, your circuit may not be able to do the work it was designed to do. Logic circuits may not
function reliably, displays may be dim, motors may stall.
On the other hand, if there is too much current, things will heat up and components may be damaged. In extreme
cases there may even be smoke or flames.
Be careful here! Measuring currents above the selected range can damage your meter!
This meter has 4 ranges from 200 microamps to 200 milliamps. In addition, the 20 milliamp setting can be used to
measure up to 20 amps when used with a special high-current probe jack.
Multimeters contain sensitive circuits capable of precision measurements of tiny currents and voltage. These circuits
can be damaged or destroyed by high current flow. That is why most meters have a separate jack for high current
measurements. This jack is fused for safety. If you are using the high-current setting, be sure to use the right jack.
Measuring current with the wrong connections can damage your meter!
Use extra caution when measuring high current levels. There is an old saying in electronics: "It is not the
voltage that kills you, it is the current".
These two meters use the same jack for all measurements except high current measurements.
Also note the warning labels indicating maximum safe levels for each jack.
For this example, we are going to measure the battery supply current going into a MintyBoost:
First we need to break the circuit so we can insert our meter. In this case we will just unsolder the battery wire from
the Mintyboost circuit board
The positive meter probe is connected to the positive battery lead. The negative probe connects to
the temporary lead we soldered to the Mintyboost circuit board. This closes the loop and makes the battery current
flow through the meter.