Yes, but how many people invest $40-50 in a half-decent mutlimeter accurate to (at least) 2 decimal points in 100V range? You want 2 accurate points to make sure that for example, that when it reads 48.12, it is really 48.12 or 48.13 and not 48.19. Most consumers are inexperienced, they are buying $3 Ebay multimeter or same thing from Harbor Freight for $6 and think that it's accurate.I know it was mentioned already, But a good Volt/Ohm meter will give you a Accurate reading, and probably More accurate than your on board display. ?
Built-in voltmeter on a charger is more convenient than multimeter, and they are cheap. Ebay is full of $1 panel meters reading 2 decimal points, the 2nd point is rounded up +/- 0.005V, I could live with that, but the readings change if you as much as frown at it. No thermal stability or some other Chinese shortcuts. Tried my luck 2 times, the 2nd time got lucky, works well.
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