15 August 2024

Fairchild Multimeter Model 7050


I bought a Fairchild 7050 multimeter because it has slightly larger than usual Nixies. There was no indication of its state, but I could count the three tubes in the pictures. It looked a bit dirty as visibile in the picture below.

Picture of a dirty Fairchild model 7050 multimeter
Picture by the seller.

When it arrived I tried powering it at half AC voltage, just in case, but nothing happened. There was no current draw as the power supply didn't sag a single Volt. As it was sold as a "low cost accurate 3-digit instrument" (quote from the manual), there is just one screw in the back keeping everything together. Also the AC cord is soldered to the board, there is no socket.

Once I could look inside I measured that the fuse was intact, so I moved to the ON/OFF switch and sure enough it did nothing: open in both positions. If everything else is OK, it will have to be replaced and shouldn't be too hard to find since it was a "low cost instrument" probably using very common parts.

I created a short across the switch and tried again the power-up sequence as before. At 120 Vac it wouldn't display anything, but there were no signs of smoke, overheating, smell, burns, exploded components, ... so we stepped to the nominal 220 Vac... whoa! It is working!

I did some tests and the readings agree with my other DVM's. Well, let's say they are in the ballpark but hardly within the 0.1% advertised in the manual. Thought there is no drift after the warm-up and nothing blew up after more than 60 minutes of doing something.

So, apart from cleaning, fixing the power switch and maybe trying to recalibrate it, this little beauty from the past should not present other challenges and is ready to go into service.