The A range currently shows zero current regardless of applied current. I know current is flowing since I had the other meter in series.
Ideas, suggestions.
1) Since your Fluke 177 is a bit older, see if it being recalled by Fluke. Recalled units have a serial number below 79000000.
http://www.cpsc.gov/en/Recalls/2002/CPSC-Fluke-Corp-Announce-Recall-of-Digital-Multimeters/Though you are not the original owner, Fluke may want to get the meter and repair/replace it regardless due to safety/liability. At worst, they can so no, at best you get a brand new calibrated Fluke 177 for the cost of sending them the meter via USPS ($10 USD).
2) There are no schematics for the 170 series. However, since the analog IC is a 60 pin IC, there may be similarities between this and the older models?
A quick brief look shows the following analog ICs are quite similar in functionality which might give a clue to the analog IC in the 170.
From the schematics and service manuals.
Fluke 75 II - analog IC part number 683052
FLuke 77 III - analog IC part number 791269
Fluke 27 - analog IC part number 700112
Despite serveral years and generations the above 3 analog ICs have similar pinout mappings.
3) If the 170 analog IC is similar, then we can look at the Fluke 77 III analog IC schematics. This may or may not prove anything because the schematics may not be applicable.
What we are trying to find out is if pin 24 (AM0) is the 10A input. If yes, it should show some number > 0 when there is amps flowing through the meter.