One thought that was not expressed here is what someone’s expectations are. Are you expecting a certified watt measurement or are you expecting an “about” measurement and, what are YOU comparing it to? If I align a radio using a Bird, Telewave, Dosy or any other non-Amazon basic meter, when I hand to the operator they will connect it to their “whatever brand” meter and there meter reading will NEVER match mine. In fact, I tell the operators whose radios I work on that the meter is just a reference and not to be used literally. None of us will ever win the argument of what meter is best because 99.999% of folks use meters that are not calibrated so what does the perfect reading matter? It also lends itself to the discussion/competition of whose putting out more watts. More watts as measured or compared to what? If you are aligning a radio and setting the watts for someone then do your best to be sure that your meter is close. I have 5 different meters that are VERY similar when reading 4 watts (AM) and 12 watts (SSB) or even up to 20-25 watts for an export. Once the measurements get over say 50 watts then they do start to differ. If I try to measure a 2-pill amp then all 5 will be 10-20 or more watts different. I don’t know why that is and I’m sure someone on here could explain it but for me, (a non-amp tech or builder), I just don’t care. I want to be sure that any CB, export or occasional ham rig I work on is working correctly and is within it’s safe power limits when it leaves the bench. For most of us it’s a hobby so close should be ok especially knowing that whoever gets the radio we fixed will most certainly get a different reading with whatever meter they are using.
I am interested in hearing which meters that are made today are “better” than what we have been using.
@SuperLid and
@AudioShockwav have suggested that they are out there and I honestly have no idea who makes them.
Now to the next important question…..how do we measure whose radio sounds the best……
All the best to you..