This is not a HA troubleshooting question per se, but it is a tool that I use for HA troubleshooting, so I'm going to ask my question anyway.
I have a Craftsman DMM that has the capability to measure 20A AC current. It has a thermal fuse inside that allows it to tolerate the maximum of 20A for 30 seconds every 15 minutes. Basically, there is some kind of bimetal strip inside that opens if too much current is sent through the DMM for too long. It then takes up to 15 minutes to cool down and reset. I've used this DMM for years and it's been great. But, I've never used it for current measurement. I have a chipper that I'm replacing the power switch on and I'm trying to determine the current draw during startup. The old switch was a 12A thermal breaker that kicked off after a minute or so of being bogged down and would take 15-20 minutes to reset. I purchased a new 12A switch that was supposed to be identical, but it's tripping after 2-3 seconds. Rather than continuing to throw money at this old chipper, I figured I'd determine the actual current draw so I could see what switch I need.
I borrowed a kill-a-watt a while back and found that the chipper pulls 9A when running and not chipping. If it's chipping and bogs down, it will pull up to 13.8A. But, since the kill-a-watt averages over ~15 seconds, I don't know what the peak startup current is.
Now, back to the DMM. I hooked it up in series with the switch and the chipper won't turn on. If I pull the DMM out of the circuit, it will turn on correctly. When I try to use the DMM, it flashes the fuse icon. I guess I'm wondering if a bimetal fuse can fail? The only other time I used it was when I was testing my old furnace. I did touch the wrong location and throw sparks one time and it did turn off the DMM temporarily. I've seen no issues with it since, but I wonder if the thermal fuse somehow got borked. I'll probably open up the DMM to see if anything looks toasty, but I was hoping someone with more experience could provide some basic guidance if I'm obviously doing something wrong. My only other option is to 1) buy a new DMM, 2) buy a current transformer, 3) buy some kind of kill-a-watt that doesn't average over so long, 4) scrap the chipper and get a new one.