Thanks for the thanks rasa.
Like you, I have (always used) a DMM or older analog multimeter.
I used to think test lights just provided one "cheap" MM function.
It wasn't until I got on here that I eventually realised their advantage thanks to Howard's (Howie II's) writings.
I realised what I wrote above about a LED test light except a MM/DMM has infinite impedance (well, at least tens of megaOhms).
I had always realised that a MM could give a deceptive reading eg, is that 12.6V reading through a relay coil or bulb? But I hadn't (permanently) realised that a test light could solve that. IE - we usually want to know if it's a power source (a low impedance 12V or GND) or if that path includes some component (bulb, relay coil etc). A DMM has no chance of detecting that except by removing power from the test circuit and measuring resistance, and then matching that resistance to what is there. Or perhaps connecting a resistor and measuring its voltage drop.
Now IMO a test
bulb is much quicker and simpler. Sure, the bulb needs to be of similar resistance to the path under test, but coincidentally the most convenient & common bulb (2-3W) of ~~50R is similar to a lot of open circuit source resistances - ie, to a floating 7W or maybe 21W bulb, or a 60R to 400R relay coil etc.
A 10:1 ratio should be easy to detect, hence a path range of ~4R to 400R.
And though a 10% dim or
less bright bulb may be hard to detect, simply change the power-side of the test bulb to the opposite supply (+12V else GND). [ I am assuming that ~1V will light the bulb enough to detect, but you get the point - it may require a bit more. ]
With different
line impedances a ~3W bulb may not be suitable. That's where a LED version might be handy, though for vehicle electrics (not electronics), usually it's a case of using a headlight instead (eg, starter solenoids).
But aside from all the above, for most testing, IMO a bulb is the quickest way to test for power or GND. You don't even have to look directly at the bulb to see if it lights or not. Have you ever used a DMM only to slip off the target when you try to read the display, then try to get the probe back on that small target without touching other wires etc? With the light, you just concentrate on the probe touching the target.
That covers the two advantages with a test light - namely the ease of "reading", and the "non-solid GND or +12V" aspect. (And it was the latter that I realised thanks to the12volt (ie, Howard).
The 3rd advantage is its simplicity. If stuck somewhere without a DMM, it should be relatively easy to make a test light - borrow a dash or clearance bulb etc.
BTW - I drive a 48 year old vehicle. Modern cars with LEDs are somewhat different - both to borrow & remove, and their higher resistance. But the latter probably doesn't matter for power continuity testing in emergency situations.
And I'm talking about a "raw" test light, not those with other functions or properties - like my "remote sensing" test light for AC voltages (that I only bought last year because of temporary employment servicing and repairing white goods).
Sorry for all my blah blah verbiage, but this was another but rare "recent" learning. I realised that
those cheap, bullsh & crappy test lights were not bullsh nor crap. In fact in many ways they are far superior to MMs for vehicle electrics testing.
In retrospect, MMs really are NOT suited to typical vehicle testing when compared to test lights. (Maybe FIRST test with a test light. After that maybe a DMM to test resistances or voltage drops...)
Also BTW - O forgot to add earlier that "R" meant Ohms (eg, 470R, 1R2 etc), but I guess you knew else figured that.
An amusing closing?...
I still have not built nor obtained a 12V (DC) test light despite my high priority intentions to get one after joining the12volt. But since I still haven't completed my 1988 distributorless CPU ignition, I figure a few years ain't too bad. (LOL!)
PS - my '88 ignition was almost resurrected in 2005 when I thought I'd have to demonstrate to a certain (qualified!) audience that a self-tuning ignition
and EFI was indeed possible, as was sequential firing with a mere SINGLE crank Reference mark (ie, no CAS). But then I discovered limited self-tuning had been in production since at least 1990.
And because some laughed at the suggestion of the latter CAS-less sequential, when I found another that knew, we decided to keep quiet. But I also think we enjoyed laughing at those that laughed insisting it couldn't be done.
(Let those that don't know continue in ignorance. That is NOT my usual philosophy, but CASless sequential and the Greenhouse Effect (climate change?) are my two exceptions.)
LOL - My PS for that incidental or hijack closing is longer than the rest of my reply!
