Throwing in my 2 cents with a HUGE grain of salt because I'm NOT an electrician....
I bought a Chinese made Fluke 15B in the UK. At the time, they weren't available in the US. Think I paid less than $80 for it.
Unlike some of the cheaper models, it came with premium leads that (I think) are silicone rubber and heavy duty. They don't kink and they don't get tangled. No idea what the meter does or doesn't do. IMHO cheap wires make meters more difficult to use and Fluke leads are kinda expensive but worth paying extra for. Fluke also has really nice accessories like huge alligators you can grab a car battery lug with.
The way the battery replacement works on the 15B, you push this little battery tray onto terminals soldered to the main CB. I misaligned it and broke one of those terminals. I got the part from china for $12 and replaced the broken one (a little minor CB repair). This may be the sort of thing you get with the Asian imports and is better on the US Flukes. It's little stuff like that I suspect. That said. It broke and I fixed it. Parts were available, just not local.
I recently bought a Fluke T5-600 for household wiring (I'm building and recently installed a sub panel. A first for me!) I like the T5-600 because it's easy to hold, and easy to operate one handed. Not sure how it would be for DC automotive, but worth googling to see if there are other meters with that form factor. I think if I were starting over, I'd get a Power Probe for automotive and the T5 or something similar for household wiring. You can put the T5 in your back pocket.
I bought a Chinese made Fluke 15B in the UK. At the time, they weren't available in the US. Think I paid less than $80 for it.
Unlike some of the cheaper models, it came with premium leads that (I think) are silicone rubber and heavy duty. They don't kink and they don't get tangled. No idea what the meter does or doesn't do. IMHO cheap wires make meters more difficult to use and Fluke leads are kinda expensive but worth paying extra for. Fluke also has really nice accessories like huge alligators you can grab a car battery lug with.
The way the battery replacement works on the 15B, you push this little battery tray onto terminals soldered to the main CB. I misaligned it and broke one of those terminals. I got the part from china for $12 and replaced the broken one (a little minor CB repair). This may be the sort of thing you get with the Asian imports and is better on the US Flukes. It's little stuff like that I suspect. That said. It broke and I fixed it. Parts were available, just not local.
I recently bought a Fluke T5-600 for household wiring (I'm building and recently installed a sub panel. A first for me!) I like the T5-600 because it's easy to hold, and easy to operate one handed. Not sure how it would be for DC automotive, but worth googling to see if there are other meters with that form factor. I think if I were starting over, I'd get a Power Probe for automotive and the T5 or something similar for household wiring. You can put the T5 in your back pocket.