I understand that it may not be a true peak meter but was wondering if it was peak or average nonetheless. Thank you for your reply
It's a good idea on getting the current true peak meter available as not all of us want to drop the coin for a bird meter.
I have the cn-901 but it's a little generous on the readings so it's in line with one of the station radios. Looking for something to go in the test bench that can be fairly accurate when working on my own projects.
If it doesn't have a AVG / PEP switch then it's definitely an AVG ONLY meter. If it's not an active PEP circuit but has a PEP switch you can expect that it won't hold as well and may not be as accurate for PEP.
You also may want to run a low pass filter between the radio and meter if your active meter is reading higher than you think it should be.
All that being said, some of the active peak meters can be just as inaccurate as any other meter. I honestly don't trust any meter to be "completely accurate" unless I happened to watch the factory technician calibrate it in front of me
I've tried a lot of them and many of them seemed to return numbers that were higher than they should have been. For example the palstar are fairly well thought of but the brand new one I tested was off and I had to send it back to be re-calibrated. Afterwards it was fine but I've had this experience with other brand new meters that were supposed to be "quality meters".
I think we all have to accept that for $150-$350 you're not guaranteed accuracy - you might happen to get it, you might not.
I am interested to try out the Telepost series as I've heard good things about their accuracy but of course they cost a lot more coin.
Those Siltronix FS-600a and the Yaesu version are pretty good old peak meters though, if I happened to see one under $75 I'd probably take a risk and buy it. I like the meter display on those - so many of the newer meters don't have a good display for low power increments.
I like the look of the MFJ Big Meter but never bought one because I just wasn't sure I'd trust the readings.
I guess the question is - how much accuracy do you need? My biggest need is in the low power scale. Under 20 watts I want accuracy within 0.25-0.5 watts if possible but of course most of the time I don't need a peak meter for what I'm doing in that scale anyways.
On a 200 watt scale I don't really care if it's off by 10-20 watts.