which multimeter ?

I think you will have difficulty finding one that conforms with the relevant IP standard to make it truly up to a marine lifestyle at least at a sensible price.

I have one of Maplin's cheapest, bought when they were 2 for the price of one and I keep it in a resealable plastic bag.

They are now better in so much that they come in a protective holster but would still need the protection of the plastic bag. At present on sale at a reduced price. Under a fiver. Get two or three.
http://www.maplin.co.uk/Module.aspx?ModuleNo=37279

I feel that it would be no great loss if wrecked on the boat but I would be gutted if I had shelled out for a much better meter and that was wrecked.
If I had the need for a better quality instrument ... if i were an electronics engineer perhaps .. I would keep the good one at home and still buy the cheapies for the boat.

Look at Maplins range

http://www.maplin.co.uk/Search.aspx?menuno=67481

I also bought 4 of these when it was buy one get one free. Had them 8 or 9 years, one on a boat, one in a caravan, in back of car, in garage, in workshop, in house. Must have about 6 bought over the years. Never had any problem with them apart from changing a battery every so often.

I look after things but don't put them in plastic bags etc.

Don't understand this "damp on a boat" problem that people mention. If you have good ventilation and decent windows which ARN'T COVERED BY CURTAINS AT ALL then your boat should not be damp.
 
Another visit to the boat, another dead multimeter!

Any thoughts on a basic meter that can survive in the hot, salty environment on board and take a few knocks? I don't want a mega expensive one, on the other hand I don't want to buy a new cheapo every time I go sailing.

Ah! Another example of buy cheap buy twice (or more!!)

Dont waste your money on cheap ones, buy a Fluke meter, it will last a lifetime.
 
Ah! Another example of buy cheap buy twice (or more!!)

Dont waste your money on cheap ones, buy a Fluke meter, it will last a lifetime.

But I could buy 60 cheap ones for the cost of one rugged Fluke!! buy cheap buy twice has its place, and maybe for some an onboard multimeter is a no compromise instrument. For me I need one to hand that will work and if its lost or stolen it won't be a disaster.
 
Sorry for slight thread drift, but how can I test the accuracy of my multimeter? reason I ask is that I have just fitted a Stirling Charge/inverter that has a LED display, the voltage reading on that is 0.7 less than my multimeter reads, I also have a second multimeter that reads within 0.1 of the other, this difference is obviously significant in terms of battery condition.

Is there a protection diode in there? Or are the LEDs low voltage drop ones?
 
Ah! Another example of buy cheap buy twice (or more!!)

Dont waste your money on cheap ones, buy a Fluke meter, it will last a lifetime.

Until you connect it across voltage when switched to amps etc. End of life!

For what you want on a boat a cheap meter is as good as any. You are not doing lab work. Volts are only a guide to battery condition Your reading can vary 0.1. Even more on low voltages with a dirty contact.
Don't worry about "Marine conditions" If it is kept in a reasonably dry codition it will be OK. I use an (Empty) ice cream box It holds extra leads etc all in one place.
 
I bought the cheepy Maplin 2 for 1 meters. One stays on the boat the other in the kitchen drawer for testing batteries. I also have a general purpose Fluke which I keep in the toolkit at home. All three meters agree exactly when measuring a 12v battery. So that's within 10mV or 0.1%.
The Fluke is one of their cheapest but still has Max, Min, frequency, capacitance etc. Max is brilliant for testing a connection under load. Min is equally useful for checking a car battery when starting a car. No idea how robust it is. I cherish it! Mind you I have blown the current fuse. A new one is twice the price I paid for the two cheep meters.
 
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