do i need true RMS for electronics?
Yes. The only reason to use true RMS meters is in electrical work, where most DMM type work is on dirty AC line voltage, and more importantly at 50-60 Hz. Beyond those frequencies accuracy starts to vary. Most DMM specs now report AC only up to 500 Hz.
In AC work, the presence of harmonics will distort the pure sine wave, and thus, also affect the readings; likewise non-sine waves also alter the readings such as square and triangular waveforms. The RMS meters are more immune to these effects.
Electronics work is very common with varying frequencies, and again RMS meters read better herein too.
Note, for some Fluke meters, the difference is not that marked when it comes to sine waves, so a Fluke non-RMS meter does well in measuring AC sine waves up to its rated frequency. Since electronics work may likely be in a 'cleaner' environment, a true RMS DMM is not as necessary. Averaging ACV for pure sine waves give much better accuracy across all tested frequencies, at least by Fluke's standards, compared to the higher frequency range using true RMS; at worse its reporting 2% +
20 digits!
Enclosed are the specs of the 83, 85, and 87 in ACV and AC A comparing averaging AC versus true RMS.
Compare it against the spec sheet of the Extech 430, and note its true RMS is far more inaccurate that the averaging reading Fluke 83.