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First point I would make is always get one that is reputable and meets at least 300V CAT-III use.

Sooner or later you will put it on the mains on the wrong range. A blown fuse is an irritation, an exploding meter potentially leaves you with serious injuries or worse :(

A few folk have recommended the Testo 760 series of auto-ranging meters as less chance of errors, the -2 version seems to be the best combination of features and price, but for most folks even the -1 is fine.

I have a couple of meters to hand, an old Fluke that I don't use on mains as it has an unfused 10A range and I'm not using fused GS38 probes, and a Fluke 179 which is very accurate but expensive (also USA made, not China).

But you can get a decent enough meter with CAT-III rating for around £30-40 such as the Extech EX205T or similar (we also have some older versions of them and have lasted a good few years), or DiLog PL280N, etc.
 
Someone shoot me down

Multimeters to me was always DIY
Electronics lab?
Current- you'd use a clamp
Typically for more than an amp or so, or if high PFC is possible, a clamp meter is your safest/best bet.

But for smaller currents, or DC, then few clamp meters will work and a multimeter will do an excellent job down to tens of uA or less. Just take care you don't have surges/switch on big enough to blow the fuse!

You did get a fused meter, didn't you?!!!
Ohms I'd use the IR tester/resistance tester

Voltage I'd use the 2 wire tester
As @telectrix has pointed out, your typical MFT/Megger has a hole in the middle with poor/no resolution (from typically around 200R to 100K). Also some electronics might need a high R but only safe to a volt or so testing.

If all you are looking at is mains power cables then your MFT is the job, but folks might have other aspects they need to work on.
 
I am tempted by the Fluke one but the one I posted earlier was recommended by someone who works in water/gas as a spark. It does seem to have a lot of functions.
 
I am tempted by the Fluke one but the one I posted earlier was recommended by someone who works in water/gas as a spark. It does seem to have a lot of functions.

Looks like a decent buy to me. Don't think you'll go wrong with that.
 
Very nice, it’s an awful lot of money.

This is my general meter to use.

I have better ones,but I think it is a good rugged all rounder. You might be able to save few quid by getting a 177 it's literally the same just with out the thermocouple
 

Buy this now.

It's a good bit better than the 115 and isn't much more expensive.

He's just giving it away at that money
 

Buy this now.

It's a good bit better than the 115 and isn't much more expensive.

He's just giving it away at that money

A little out of my price range unfortunately. It looks as though it’s sold straight away.
 
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RDB85

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Multimeter Recommendations
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