I have a couple nice multimeters upstairs in my "lab" for electronics use, including a Fluke 87-V, but I usually keep a multimeter downstairs in the garage for automotive and household use. In this case it was a free circuitspecialists multimeter that I've had for a decade or two.
While wiring a 240VAC 30-amp RV receptacle, I figured I'd do a quick voltage check and grabbed the multimeter from the toolbox. There was a loud pop, the 30 amp breaker tripped, a small amount of brass from the receptacle was now welded to the multimeter probe, and something was rattling around inside the multimeter. It seems in my haste I forgot to check where the leads were connected, and whomever had used the multimeter last (probably me) has left the leads attached to the 500ma current jack.
Attached is a picture what the inside of the multimeter looks like. The stuff rattling around inside was fragments of the 500ma fuse. There's surprisingly little mechanical damage to the inside, just some deformation of the fuse holder and a lot of soot. It could have been much worse.
I've decided that using the cheapest sketchiest "free" multimeter that I own for the occasional mains work because it's too much work to trek upstairs for the good meter is probably not a wise idea.
I'm thinking of ordering a Fluke 117 to keep downstairs in the garage. Any thoughts on this meter? I've watched Dave's video and I realize that it's not suitable for fine electronic work (I have an 87-V for that), but it seems like a decent meter for occasional mains or automotive use.