Mostly bad news. My wife did indeed toss out my 8060A parts box. I have no parts for anyone, and I'm truly sorry.
I have three 8060A's and 2 8062As all in good physical shape. Only the 8060A that I use at home for sure works. The others haven't been fired up in years. One of the 8060s is a blue IBM style, and one has a regular color case but with an IBM label.
I do have a lot of literature: Three 8060 user guides, one IBM user guide. Also about 30 copies of the "quick start" guide. I do have a copy of the original, not quite the production, schematic. I couldn't find my D size hand drawn schematic. I have copious design notes. I had forgotten how much that 7660 circuit gave me grief. It caused noise on the AC readings as well as false counts on the frequency counter. You can see in the original schematic (scan coming tomorrow), nothing had been done about that yet. An inordinate amount of time was spent on optimizing the PCB and plastic shield to get that 100kHz bandwidth.
As far as other Fluke oldies I have: D804 (a variant of the 8024) but its LCD is toast and the case is cracked. Good everywhere else so could be parted. An 8050 4 1/2 digit benchtop. This was pre 8060 and didn't have any of the premium Audio features. I have one 8922 True RMS Voltmeter (with lots of design notes as this was my first extensive engineering project). I was the junior engineer on that one and did all the testing and optimization for the Sr Engineers. I have a rare 8860 5 1/2 digit DMM. I have an 8012 Benchtop, two 8020s, one a 8020A and the other and 8020B. I did find two A/D converters in antistatic foam for the 8020 (and all its derivatives).
Fluke was a player in Frequency counters back then. I managed to obtain two by trading people in other business units out of my hard model collection of 8060s. Those things were like gold back then. I have a 7220 125 MHz Freq counter with a 1GHz prescaler option. I also have a 7260 Universal Counter Timer (125MHz).
Other interesting stuff I found: The original announcement article published in Electronics Magazine under my byline. This is in good shape and I'll scan it for all you 8060 buffs. I also have two hand drawn pictures of 8060 concepts. One shows a much changed LCD that didn't come to fruition. The other shows a concept using two slide switches on the side. I was really gung ho on that one, but it was rejected as too radical. Also you can see it had a 10A input which didn't make it into the 8060. I'll scan these documents in and post them here tomorrow.
I also have User guides for all of the above units, so if anyone is missing a manual for their vintage Fluke DMM, drop me a line and I'll see if I have one. I found a maintenance manual for the 8020 as well.
Again, I'm sorry I can't deliver on parts for 8060s. I'm sure my wife was convinced my old Fluke stuff was junk. I tore my garage apart looking for it, but other than the complete meters listed above, it is gone. What's really sad is I had a complete box of all parts to make 10 or so 8060s with cases, LCDs, blank circuit boards, molded shields, custom switch arrays. etc. So sad. My wife and I had a bit of a row when I accused her of tossing them. Oh well, life goes on.