Yes, great addition to the thread Etienne ! Indeed I watched it before and I really liked his drawing because it gives a nice overview how stuff interacts.
I also saw his (?) Punch Out videos using the Fluke, even if that's not the game I'm (or anyone) is working on, it is still very useful !
His Fluke is a 9010, I have a 9100. The 9100 is more advanced in about every way you can think (so advanced, you COULD program a script that would test a board from front to end in one go....but it would take YEARS to develop something like that.....this was only useful for factories. It can even "drive" a robot tester....
However, the 9010 is so much more used in this hobby that there is more info about that one available. Message returned by the 9100 are different (more clear text compared to abbreviations). It also does the tests better and faster AFAIK, but still....since "everyone" has a 9010 it's sometimes a bit confusing.
The 9010 is definitly already more than what you'd ever need for the hobby, the 9100 is 100x overkill and I use only the basic functions.
The probe is brilliant though, even though I could just as well use a 10 bucks one
I am aware that it is hard to follow by texts only. You'd need to have at least the schematics in front _and_ understand a bit what everything does, but I'm also writing this for myself and hopefully some others can use it in the future.
I plan to make a video of how I work with the 9100A. It's a very cool device, especially for free
