Category Archives: Equipment

Compare insulation testing equipment from top brands. Reviews, buying guides, and specs for megohmmeters, hi-pot testers, and portable diagnostic instruments.

How to Choose an Insulation Tester: A Complete Buyer’s Guide

Choose the wrong insulation tester and you’ll either waste money on capabilities you don’t need or get stuck with equipment that can’t handle the job. Both happen often. A residential electrician buying a $3,000 5-kV tester to verify branch circuits, or an industrial maintenance team trying to test 13.8 kV motor windings with a 1 kV handheld —… Read More »

Insulation Tester Calibration: Why, When, and How

A megohmmeter sitting on a shelf for two years still reads numbers when you pull the trigger. The display lights up. The needle deflects (or the digital readout shows MΩ). The test seems to work. But the readings could be off by 30% and you’d never know — until an audit catches it, a critical test produces wrong… Read More »

Hipot Testers Explained: AC vs DC, Withstand vs Breakdown, Safety Specs

A hipot tester applies a voltage well above the equipment’s rated operating voltage and watches what happens. If the insulation holds, the equipment passes. If the insulation breaks down, the equipment fails. This sounds simple, but the practical implementation is full of decisions that affect what you can detect, what you can damage, and what your test results… Read More »

Best Megohmmeters for 2026: A Practical Buyer’s Guide

Every megger review article online reads like a sponsored post. “Fluke is the best. Megger is also the best. Also here are five other brands that are the best.” That’s not useful when you’re trying to decide which instrument to actually buy. This guide takes a different approach. It matches megohmmeters to the kind of work you actually… Read More »

Megger vs Hi-Pot: What’s the Difference?

Megger testing and hi-pot testing both involve applying high voltage to insulation. Both measure how current behaves through that insulation. And both help you find problems before they cause failures. But they’re not the same test. They serve different purposes, use different voltage levels, and are used at different stages of an equipment’s life. Mixing them up —… Read More »