Great looking little meter. Another good pair of meters (among other features) are the Pokit line of scopemeters that work with an app on your phone for displaying results. I've got the original, which looks like a keyfob. The leads retract into the body with the press of a button, and are the tiniest probes I've seen on a meter. They snap into the body of the meter when the leads are retracted. The Pokit 2 is more of a pen-style meter such as the one you're reviewing. Both can function as multimeters or as single-channel oscilloscopes. I wish I could say I watched the entire video, Dave, but the camera was bouncing and vibrating around so much, it gave me a touch of sim-sickness and I had to turn it off. You might want to consider having a Panavise or "third hand" helper to hold items like this meter steady so you can record them with a tripod mounted camera. The information you were giving was wonderful, and I really wanted to finish watching it, but sim-sickness really gets me in the inner ears, and I'll start feeling oddly feverish and a little nauseated, it getting worse the longer the video bounces or swings around. It's named after the sensation I described, caused by video games and simulators that don't have a steady "camera", or have too narrow a field of vision. The inner ear doesn't feel what the eyes are telling your brain should be there, so the nauseated feeling and feverish sensation show how hard the brain is trying to match up the view with the body's inner ear. It also happens in movies and TV shows that make too much use of "shakycam". COPS is notorious for this, when the cameraman riding with the police has to run to keep up.