Originally posted by Oldmactech
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Touching the probes together should give you a 0.0 reading - or nearly so - on all but the lowest scale. Depending on the calibration of the meter, it may read a few tenths of an Ohm through the probes. Note the reading and the scale used.
Repeat the tests with the probes not touching - not the other, not anything. You should get the over-range indication for every scale. Some meters show OL, some show 1. (19., 199., etc depending on the range) or similar. Become familiar with the info the meter tells you that indicates an invalid reading.
Do you have a resistor laying around that you could measure? Try that too. Then, if all that looks good to you, poke again at the resistors in the amp.
Unplugged, power off, caps discharged, of course
I'd expect you to get a higher-than-normal reading if there's corrosion or a coating or something else that might interfere with getting a solid connection. I do NOT expect a seriously low reading, like the ones you posted earlier.
If the meter tells you wonky things when testing against 'standards', then I'd suspect bad batteries in the meter, or bad probe cables, or bad technique.
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