My multimeters:
Fluke 26 III - Got it used a long time ago. It works. Reads a little low at high voltage (e.g. 300V) but otherwise solid. 600V CAT III. I was able to jam it in place in the shelf so it was my goto bench meter for a while. This is the meter that I use for electrical work at home (replacing outlets and light fixtures, etc.) and for checking prospective Craigslist purchases with e.g. measuring speaker resistance. I think that this is the same thing as the Fluke 79 III. Details:
https://dam-assets.fluke.com/s3fs-public/7926____iseng0200.pdfFluke 179 - Bought it new with a couple of probe sets, case, magnet attachment (for hanging it to ferrous things), and thermometer about 10 years ago for around USD350. Really happy with it. 600V CAT IV. LED Backlight. Super-fast continuity beeper. Details:
https://www.fluke.com/en-us/product/electrical-testing/digital-multimeters/fluke-179HP 3455A - The "+" sign is missing in the photo due to scan frequency mismatch of the LED display and the camera. 5 1/2 to 6 1/2 digit multimeter. I got this one used off of Craigslist for USD60. What a steal! Like with all old gear, the line filter needs replacing. Also the fan is noisy, so I need to replace that, too. This is a beautiful piece of engineering from the late 1970s / early 1980s. Do yourself a favor and check out daqq's pictures of the inside of this thing. This meter cost more than a car when it was new. When you open it up, it becomes immediately obvious why.
https://www.eevblog.com/forum/testgear/hp-3455a-teardown/msg324586/#msg324586There's a nice little page on HP meters, "Evolution of Digital Voltmeters during the 1960 to 1980 Period":
https://www.hpmemoryproject.org/wb_pages/wall_b_page_14b.htmGardner Bender GMT-312 - I expensed this at work to fly around with. It cost about USD15. It runs off of a single AA battery. It came with little mini probes with mini- safety-style connectors. I chose it because it was the cheapest multimeter I could find that was listed with a reputable testing agency (Intertek's ETL program, in this case). Details:
https://www.gardnerbender.com/en/p/GMT-312/5-Function-Analog-Multimeter#GW Instek GDM-8251A - This is my goto bench meter. Bought this one used on ebay for about USD250. This model was released around 2013. It is no longer sold. 120,000 counts (about 5 digits). Mine is in pretty good condition: incudes front and rear rubber baby buggy bumpers and the folding bale. It is fanless. I keep it powered on all of the time. It has an "OUTPUT" button on the front that turns on/off the VFD and unlocks/locks the other keys. VFD is still fairly bright (set on 4 out of 5 as shown). I was looking for something that was supported by both sigrok (
https://sigrok.org/ ) and Test Controller (
https://www.eevblog.com/forum/testgear/program-that-can-log-from-many-multimeters/msg2981004/#msg2981004 ). It's got RS-232C, USB Device, and Digital I/O. There is PC software available for it. It has various very handy features such as a user-configureable averaging, relative measurements (makes it easy to see difference between two voltages or resistors), and can do basic math on readings (you could use this to display milliamps as you measured the voltage across a 14.7kOhm resistor). It does not measure capacitance, but I have a DER DE-5000 LCR meter. Details here:
https://www.gwinstek.com/en-IN/products/detail/GDM-8251APro-tip:
don't keep alkaline batteries in your expensive test equipment! A leaky $1 battery can RUIN a fancy $380 multimeter. Use NiMH rechargeables or lithium primary (non-rechargeable) batteries as these have a better track record.
EDIT:
The Fluke 23/26/77/79 was the first "real" multimeter I ever used. It is what I think of when someone says "multimeter".