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Everyone who watches Martin knows he has certain pet peeves regarding multimeter functionality.
One of mine is overshoot. When I see a multimeter overshoot dramatically, I automatically distrust it. So at 31:28 (part 2) when the UT71D shows 455.7V AC on mains, I'm already never going to use that multimeter on anything high voltage.
I don't believe it is actually overshooting. While it autoranges the ADC just spews out live values and the displayed range/decimal point actually lags behind the digits. The digits also seem to be autoranging up while the decimal point is autoranging down. If the display shows 455.7V briefly then it is actually 45.57V, or 4.557v or .4557v. It's a quirk but hardly a deal breaker imo. If you keep it on a manual range, it won't overshoot.
With only a single PTC for input protection and glass M205 fuses, I'm going to agree with not using the UT71D on high power circuits.... Interesting that there is a spot on the PCB for a MOV or spark gap (marked SG1, between the PTC and fuse), and larger fuse holders. I wonder if the UT71E has those parts populated since it's selling point is that it does mains power measurement.
Other things that are surprising are that they have used (what appears to be) a genuine Analog Devices AD636 true rms converter when cyrustek make an equivalent clone, the ES636, it's even mentioned in the datasheet for the cyrustek es51966 that is used in the UT71. They also use a maxim MAX6190a 5ppm/ºC voltage reference and just generally seem to be going out of their way to use reputable brands even when they could probably get away with chinese equivalents.
Things that majorly suck about the UT71 are the annoying beep every time you touch anything and can only disable if you silence all beeps, the hopelessly slow continuity tester (it is actually also reversed biased, try testing a diode with it, wtf?), the 30 second maximum on the backlight, and the resistance mode that seems to only have 4000 counts of resolution.
One other thing to consider is that the UT71 is calibrated with a heap of resistor and capacitor trimmers. You are never going to get long term stability like a Fluke 87 which is trimmed digitally. I'm still happy to use mine as my secondary meter as long as it agrees with my 87V. It sure as hell beats paying for a premium brand datalogging meter with similar accuracy as well...