My first meter was a little analog thing I got when i was 7 or something. Pretty sure I fried it rather quickly, LOL. Next came a Radio Shack meter I got in 1996 that looked an awful lot like the one at far right in
this post, but with fewer functions. When it finally died around 2011 (battery leakage, broken detent in mode selector, and something else), a coworker got me the Mastech as a surprise gift (having not realized that my offhand comment that I wanted to get a new meter actually meant I wanted to finally get a Fluke). And finally, early this year I got the Fluke 87, after literally nearly 30 years of lusting after the Fluke meters I saw advertised in Popular Electronics and the like. And finally, I picked up the old Keithley on the Swiss local equivalent of eBay to have something that can do 4-wire ohms and whatnot.
Pic 1: Fluke 87 V, Mastech MY64 (rebadged as some European distributor), Keithley 197. It probably goes without saying which one of the bunch is my everyday meter. (In the back you can see a Rigol DS1054Z, an Ersa i-Con Nano, and a Korad KA3005P.)
Pic 2: Probes. Clockwise from top left: Fluke TL175 (showing one shroud extended, one retracted); Mastech pack-in probes; Oldaker needle tip probes included with the Radio Shack meter; Oldaker standard probes given with the used Keithley (with the finger guards hacked off... wtf?); and Fluke TL224 test leads, TL238 test probes, and AC220 alligator clips all included with the Fluke 87V/E2 kit. The TL175 are the ones I use most.
Pic 3: Closeup of probe tips. Clockwise: Fluke AC220 alligator clips, Fluke TL238 test probes, Fluke TL175 test leads, Mastech, Oldaker needle tip, Oldaker standard tip.
Pic 4: The el-cheapo SMD tweezers I got off fleabay.