Chad,
I think there is a valid reason to use digital testers - color blindness.
But what Reese said is true, you would need to keep the test equipment calibrated; have a high level and low level reagent to do the calibration or else using digital testers is as good as using test strips ... is it accurate?
Coming from a medical repair background, I have wondered over the years on how good any of the inexpensive digital testers really are. Lab grade equipment is very expensive ( I just bought a graduated cylinder to use at work and a 25 ml (1 oz = 30 ml) glass grade "A" one was $75) I toyed in the middle of last year on buying a TDS meter until I read how the meters interpet the readings ... highly inaccurate.
But with all of that said, I guess if good enough is good enough then any way to test the water chemistry is going to be OK.
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V 8-)