I can run the continuity checks on a 60-100 wire harness faster with an analog meter than with a digital. For continuity, you are looking only for a needle relative position and not an exact number. The analog will have the meter movement into the region long before the digital meter will even have the leading two numbers settled enough to read. With a good partner, we can do a harness about as fast as I can call out the pin numbers to him.
Should you be needed to have an exact number for diagnosis, then use the digital.
I run a Fluke 8050A on the bench at home and a Simpson 260 in the shop at home.
^I agree. However if you turn on beep mode you don't even need to look at the DMM when doing continuity tests.
Then there's the wonderful Autohold feature where the meter tells you when it captured the reading and will hold it for you until you get around to reading it.


