LCRs are normally
- More accurate
- Able to read a wider range of values
- Can read an inductor at several different frequencies.
- Some can read capacitor ESR
- Can show if the component is within a set tolerance 1%,5%,10% etc (useful for testing many components quickly)
- Have probes and leads which are better designed to measure values without interfering themselves
And i'm sure there are other things i've missed.
LCR's are definitely handy to have but they're not really a 'must have' unless you plan to do work that requires that sort of accuracy (or, in your case, the ability to read inductors).
I bought a Peak brand LCR, they're pretty basic feature-wise but are relatively cheap and very portable.
I got the kit in a case including the peak DCA (a component tester). Which gives you all sorts of useful info from pretty much any semiconductor you connect to it, pins,forward voltage etc). The whole kit is ~100GPB+shipping from
www.peakelec.co.uk