Do you have to attach to opposite ends of the cable? That's not going to help for some spools where the other end is buried in the spool. I've seen videos of some of these that can tell the spool length by attaching to cable on the same end.
I saw a video like that and maybe I’m wrong about this…I believe the instruments you looked at are good for measuring smaller low voltage cables accurately, such as coax, or ethernet. The cable length meter in this video allows you to work with almost any gauge. A good pair of needle nose, or long nose pliers are very helpful.
Absolutely, although this test instrument manages inventory much more efficiently when going through 70 spools or more when a business is selling wire by the foot.
El aparato en cuestion aplica amperes constantes y mide el voltaje resultante lo que le permite calcular la resistencia de una manera más precisa a lo que se logra con un multímetro convencional. Saludos
Do you have to attach to opposite ends of the cable? That's not going to help for some spools where the other end is buried in the spool. I've seen videos of some of these that can tell the spool length by attaching to cable on the same end.
I saw a video like that and maybe I’m wrong about this…I believe the instruments you looked at are good for measuring smaller low voltage cables accurately, such as coax, or ethernet. The cable length meter in this video allows you to work with almost any gauge. A good pair of needle nose, or long nose pliers are very helpful.
U just need a multimeter and a chart
Absolutely, although this test instrument manages inventory much more efficiently when going through 70 spools or more when a business is selling wire by the foot.
Where I can get it ?
@@jasminerosado6195 tequipment.net, Amazon, Ebay
El aparato en cuestion aplica amperes constantes y mide el voltaje resultante lo que le permite calcular la resistencia de una manera más precisa a lo que se logra con un multímetro convencional. Saludos