No problem and it’s understood. If you would have added “ inexpensive” to your first post it would have saved a lot of discussion. Like I stated after learning this fact, pretty much any $20 DVM nowadays will do what you want and more. It might not last your lifetime like a Fluke but oh well, if money is tight just get what works. What I do when buying relatively inexpensive items is look deep into the online reviews because it seems all the positive ones are at the forefront but it’s the ones that say stuff like “ worked great for a month and then quit” are what turns me away. I tend to buy quality when possible because my philosophy is buy it once and forget it. Too many times I’ve bought the $20 item, it breaks in a year so I buy another $20 item and it breaks again so at that point I’ve wasted $40 and then the decision to keep throwing my money at junk or swallow my loss and finally buy the good one kills me because I hate to admit I made the wrong decision to start with again and now I have to pay. But i do buy cheap tools at times, it just depends on what it is and the likelihood of it failing. It can be a struggle making the initial decision.I am old, I suppose. I learned to build and test circuits when I was 10, from my dad. But it's been a while since I could do anything on my own, so I am not used to something as "simple" as a multimeter being so expensive. The last one was sacrificed to an oven to which I *thought* I had cut the power, but for which the multimeter served its purpose. And the <sigh> about having to go cheap is that we have poured a good deal of money into a truck for my daughter. It was a "deal" I failed to properly check out, and has been constantly biting me in the ass since mid February.
Thanks.