Awww... mains over here is just 120V; you can probe that with your fingers. Hurrrrrrhhhurrrrrr!!!
I might not go that far, but I'd feel OK using it for a quick "is this outlet live and delivering 120V test." or something. But I really don't do much of anything that involves working with mains voltages... and I have a separate dedicated "outlet tester" device for testing AC outlets to see if they're wired correctly and all that jazz. So this thing will rarely, if ever, see anything more than 12V ... at least intentionally.
No, seriously.... I keep its older brother, the Ragu 17B on my mnemTest stand pretty much all the time now. I keep the DE-5000 between it and my Fluke 189, so I don't seem to have any bickering or miscegenation.
As long as you don't eff around with stuff right on the mV/uV threshold, a fine little meter (especially to use as a "sacrificial element" for when I'm about to do something stupid ); the firmware bug that makes it flaky down there was a known issue when I bought it, and was probably the reason I caught it on slAmazon for $9.99.
Nice. I didn't even know it had an "older brother". I was just looking for a cheap-but-hopefully-semi-decent meter to replace one that died. I picked this more or less at random to be honest.
now you need a couple of the ANENG AN800x family for when you need to watch 3 or 4 things at once and you'll be ready for almost anything!
Well, I have this one, my other Radio Shack handheld meter, and my Rigol DM3068, so I think I'll be OK in the short-term. My next multi-meter purchase will likely be one of the "official EEVBlog" ones. But now that I've started down the rabbit-hole, I'm sure pretty soon I'll be buying more meters because "Oooh, I don't have one with a green case yet" and "oooh, look, a pink multi-meter", etc., etc., yada, yada.