The fluke DMM is considered one of the best in the industry, but measuring atomizers its jumping probably inaccurate what causes this. Thos cheap china res meters I don't trust because the aren't calibrated.
Once you compare the 510 ohm meter to a fluke and see that it it's accurate u can trust it
It's also a much more stable measurement because the measurement is taken while exactly simulating how the atty will be mounted during use. I've had no issues with my $20 little black ohm box, it's more accurate than test leads on a DMM unless you work up some sort of rig to use it with. I'd rather just trust my box since I already confirmed the accuracy of it.I have used multimeters, Fluke and others, and found that my little black box is actually more accurate since it measures to two decimal places. In my test, the Fluke read 1.7-ohms and the cheap 510 box read 1.63-ohms. Seems about right to me and I now have complete confidence in the black box.
I guess my point is that once you establish the accuracy of the black box using a meter like the Fluke, there is really no reason not to trust it and it's much easier to use.
I've a fluke 19 that measure 1.2 ohm premade 3 ohm. Shorting the probe give me 0.2...
I've a few multimeter with me all give different readings. I concluded that multimeter are not made for measuring milli ohm, as their lowest range is 0-400ohm or 0-300ohm.