What Are Measuring & Inspecting?
Measuring and inspecting equipment enables engineers to test, characterize, and troubleshoot electronic circuits. The category includes multimeters (digital and analog), oscilloscopes, LCR meters, power supplies (bench), logic analyzers, signal generators, thermal cameras, and inspection microscopes. LCSC stocks 3,000+ measuring and inspection SKUs from 50+ manufacturers.
Measuring & Inspecting — Definition and Sub-Categories
Electronic test and measurement equipment converts physical electrical quantities (voltage, current, resistance, capacitance, frequency, waveform shape) into human-readable displays for analysis. These instruments are essential for design validation, production testing, field service, and quality control.
|
Sub-Category |
Function |
Key Parameters |
|
Multimeters |
Measure voltage, current, resistance, and more |
Accuracy, input impedance, auto-range, safety rating (CAT) |
|
Oscilloscopes |
Visualize time-varying electrical waveforms |
Bandwidth (MHz), sample rate, channels, memory depth |
|
LCR Meters |
Measure inductance, capacitance, and resistance |
Test frequency, accuracy, measurement range |
|
Bench Power Supplies |
Provide adjustable regulated DC power |
Voltage/current range, channels, display, regulation |
|
Signal Generators |
Generate test waveforms (sine, square, arbitrary) |
Frequency range, waveform types, output impedance |
How to Choose: Measuring & Inspecting Selection Guide
For basic electronics work, a true RMS multimeter with CAT III safety rating covers most measurement needs. For debugging digital circuits, an oscilloscope with at least 100 MHz bandwidth captures most MCU and communication signals. For passive component verification, an LCR meter at 1 kHz and 100 kHz test frequencies covers standard needs. Match instrument accuracy to your measurement requirements — a 0.5% accuracy multimeter is sufficient for most electronics; precision analog work may need 0.01%.
Measuring & Inspecting Comparison
|
Instrument |
Essential Spec |
Entry Price |
Professional Price |
When You Need It |
|
Digital Multimeter |
3.5–4.5 digit, CAT III |
$15–$40 |
$100–$300 |
Always — most-used tool |
|
Oscilloscope |
50–100 MHz, 2-ch |
$100–$300 |
$500–$2,000+ |
Debugging timing, waveforms |
|
LCR Meter |
100 Hz–100 kHz |
$50–$150 |
$300–$1,000 |
Verifying passive components |
|
Bench PSU |
0–30V, 0–5A |
$40–$80 |
$200–$500 |
Powering circuits under development |
Why Source Measuring & Inspecting from LCSC Electronics
LCSC stocks 3,000+ test equipment SKUs from 50+ manufacturers, letting engineers add measurement tools to component orders. From entry-level multimeters for students to professional bench instruments for R&D labs, the catalog covers essential test equipment at competitive prices.
Frequently Asked Questions
Q: What oscilloscope bandwidth do I need?
Rule of thumb: oscilloscope bandwidth should be at least 5× the highest frequency signal you need to measure. For Arduino/STM32 projects (clock speeds up to 100 MHz), a 100–200 MHz scope is adequate. For RF work, you need GHz-class instruments.
Q: What does CAT III safety rating mean on a multimeter?
CAT III means the meter is safe for measurements on equipment connected to the building’s electrical distribution (panels, feeders, fixed installations). CAT II is for portable equipment plugged into outlets. Never use a meter at a higher CAT level than it’s rated for — it’s a safety risk.
Q: Do I need a 4-wire measurement for resistance?
4-wire (Kelvin) measurement eliminates lead resistance from the reading, critical for measuring low resistances (<10Ω) accurately. For typical resistor verification (100Ω+), standard 2-wire measurement is sufficient.
Q: What is the difference between a bench power supply and a wall adapter?
A bench power supply provides adjustable voltage and current with real-time display, current limiting, and precise regulation — essential for development. A wall adapter provides fixed voltage with no adjustability or current monitoring. Always use a bench supply for circuit development and debugging.