Fluke 233 Fluke 233 Application Guide - Page 34

D.F., Illinois - specifications

Page 34 highlights

Manufacturing "I would use your remote display multimeter to test and/or setup water flow switches on the semiconductor manufacturing equipment I work on. A lot of the equipment we have has water flow switches that are not near the circuit breakers that control the water pumps so we have to setup a meter and then walk around the equipment to turn on or off the pump and then walk around the equipment to see if the flow switch has sensed that the flow is on or off." P.M., Florida "Our company has a significant number of metal fabrication machines ranging from Press Brakes to Turret Punch Presses. Because of the size of the machines and the location of various components needing monitoring electrically, we frequently need a second man to assist with the monitoring. While one maintenance person is on top of the machine the other is on the ground pressing a pedal, pressing a button, or turning a momentary key switch to activate a specific component. The problem is, we don't always have the second person available to help out so I have to run very long jumpers from the top of machine to my Fluke 87 on the ground. I hate running jumpers this long (sometimes 15-18 feet long) it just gets to be a tangled mess, not to mention the clips coming loose because of machine movement. I am very excited about this new Fluke 233 Remote Display Multimeter." D.F., Illinois 34

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“I would use your remote display multimeter to test and/or
setup water flow switches on the semiconductor manufactur-
ing equipment I work on. A lot of the equipment we have has
water flow switches that are not near the circuit breakers that
control the water pumps so we have to setup a meter and
then walk around the equipment to turn on or off the pump
and then walk around the equipment to see if the flow switch
has sensed that the flow is on or off.” P.M., Florida
“Our company has a significant number of metal fabrica-
tion machines ranging from Press Brakes to Turret Punch
Presses. Because of the size of the machines and the location
of various components needing monitoring electrically, we
frequently need a second man to assist with the monitor-
ing. While one maintenance person is on top of the machine
the other is on the ground pressing a pedal, pressing a
button, or turning a momentary key switch to activate a
specific component. The problem is, we don’t always have
the second person available to help out so I have to run very
long jumpers from the top of machine to my Fluke 87 on the
ground. I hate running jumpers this long (sometimes 15-18
feet long) it just gets to be a tangled mess, not to mention the
clips coming loose because of machine movement. I am very
excited about this new Fluke 233 Remote Display Multimeter.”
D.F., Illinois
34
Manufacturing