Years ago, there were two common analog voltmeters used to troubleshooting equipment:
1. Passive VOM, such as Simpson 260 in US, that had "20,000 ohms per volt" resistance, due to 50 uA meter.
2. "VTVM", such as RCA "Voltohmyst", with 11 megohm input resistance, where 1 megohm was located in the probe before the cable to the meter box.
Schematic diagrams often specified which type of meter was used to measure the typical voltages shown on the drawing.
Note that the "VTVM" was better than modern DMMs for measuring test points where there was an AC component, since the resistor in the probe isolated the cable capacitance from the circuit. For example, when measuring the voltage at a cathode with an un-bypassed cathode resistor (for local feedback), the extra capacitance of the meter cable can possibly start oscillation, which will make a large shift in the DC voltage. If that be your problem with a DMM, a simple probe extension with a 1 megohm resistor may be needed, with an obvious math correction to the voltage reading.