2 results for "701a0693d4d9f335f9c63ba2b5681fd0"
>>107131232
>>107131266
Until you get into smd and bottom contacts it's quite easy to do. Don't be afraid of it, read picrel or watch a video on it and get started, you'll figure stuff out as you go.
>>106576402
>alright, I'll grab some 0-2$ kits next sale to get it starting
Fair enough, though eventually you'll have to do your own projects anyways.
>Literally have no idea what Im doing
You'll figure it out quickly. Soldering isn't all that complex. Coming up with the circuit is the main task of electronics work.
>For multimeter. Would you recommend buying cheap ones or something that's decently build?
That depends on what you want it for. I'd stay away from the giga cheap ones, as those have questionable accuracy and fuses. Middle market is perfectly fine, I have a uni-t one and had it for many years, zero complaints there. The expensive ones are only an issue if you need specific accuracies or specific features. If you did, you'd already know about that, so just get a normal one. You'll likely use voltage, current and continuity, which basically every multimeter has.
For price I'd be looking in the 10-25€ range if you're on a budget, below that I'm seriously suspicious (something like the ANENG SZ308 just seems sus, though aneng isn't a super bad brand), 25-60 is also a good range for a mid market meter with a few more features and accuracy. Anything above 60€ or so is overkill for you.
As for features, stay away from overly large and flashy screens-you don't need that, just results in less battery life. And try to make sure it has generic probe points at the front, no proprietary connector that you have to re-buy and hope it's in stock if it ever breaks or corrodes.
A feature that's not necessary, but really nice to use is "auto range", which makes measurement easier if you don't know the rough range of voltage/current beforehand.