crwdns2933803:015crwdne2933803:0
crwdns2933797:0Jeff Suovanencrwdnd2933797:0crwdne2933797:0
crwdns2936043:0crwdne2936043:0 crwdns2933505:0crwdne2933505:0 Jeff Suovanen
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+ | [* black] Place one probe at each end of the circuit or component you want to test. |
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+ | [* icon_note] It doesn't matter which probe goes where; resistance is non-directional. |
+ | [* black] If your multimeter reads close to zero, the range is set too high for a good measurement. Turn the dial to a lower setting. |
+ | [* black] If you set the range too low, the multimeter simply reads 1 or OL, indicating that it is overloaded or out of range. This won't hurt the multimeter, but we need to set the dial to a higher range. |
+ | [* black] The other possibility is that the circuit or component you are testing doesn't have continuity—that is, it has infinite resistance. A non continuous circuit will always read 1 or OL on a continuity test. |
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