So I have been wanting to buy a bench multimeter for home lab. I have had my eye on a Fluke 8846A for a few years. Now that I am getting close to being able to afford it, I found out that Fluke has discontinued it and the retailers with remaining inventory have raised the price by 700 to 1000 USD. The price they have now seemingly settled on is almost $2200.
Right now I am just using a $50 rebrand handheld multi-meter from a local hardware store. It's designed for electricians, not electronics. There is no microamps range. The update time is slow and there no ability to manually range, further adding to this problem. The backlight doesn't hold on, the meter automatically shuts down while I am tinkering with my circuits, and continuity latching is poor.
Overall, I would really like something much nicer, on mains power, dedicated to my lab. I really appreciated the dedicated mode buttons and minimalist approach. I really don't like gear that gets in my way so do not want to be wading through a bunch of menus. Gear that I don't completely trust is a hard no. I also liked the built-in frequency counter. Having the ability to do very precise measurements for learning about certain subtle electrical characteristics or the ability to trade that off for speed when that is not required was very nice. The VFD was also pretty cool. It's just going to sit on my work desk, I doubt it would ever be in danger of being physically damaged.
My question is this: Are there better meters and options on the market now that I should stop focusing on this one or is it worth it to pony up the extra money to get one before everyone sells out? One of the hard things is that test equipment is so niche that you can't exactly try before you buy. I can't go down to the local store and demo a bunch of makes and models.
I welcome discussion, opinions and insight. Also, I'm brand new to the forms, let me know if this is in the wrong place.