Hi,
Yes, that's why the Fluke is a good choice if you plan to service or build tube amps: you never know when MAjor Marshall shows up at your doorstep
Frequency measurements in a DVM, well if you can measure you can find something to measure, but also a measurement is useless if it is not correctly applied and correctly measured.
Down the road, you may want an oscilloscope and that's the emperor of audio measurements
Oh, you'd like a tonegenerator by then too.......
But let me tell you this the one measuring device I have solved the most complicated to the simplest and the absolute majority of problems with is just a standard DVM rated a 600V though so caution has sometimes been called for.
Try to get one with a diodetester as you then can orient various transitors.This can come in handy when you suspect a junction to be blown.
A transistor can be said to be made of two diodes and in an NPN transistor the anodes would be tied together for the base.
Just making junction measurement base to collector and base to emitter would measure like diodes.
Early transistors could be used in reverse but later finer techniques increased the transistor effect and allowed a better designed base emitter junction to be linear over several decades like from 6mV's to 600mV's in 6mV increaments and so reverse coupling did no longer work.
If you need a transistor tester I would be sure there would be some on line schematics, but you can build more complicated transistor testers that allow leakage measurements backwards through collector to base.
Resistans measurements can be used with power removed to solve various problems and once I fixed a 2x400W amplifier by measuring all components and one multilayer ceramic capacitor was the culprit- it behaved as a low resistans resistor instead of a capacitor and thus made the whole outputstage lay flat to one supplyline- something no solidstate outputstage of this caliber is designed to take for more than a few milliseconds without either blowing the fuse or blowing up.
This just goes to show how resistans faultfinding can be.
Voltage measurements usually turns up problems in a powered circuit, but will require a rough guess of what would be correct voltage if that isn't known.
These are just a few things and there are so many more things that could be told but the DVM and the VOM before that is likely to continue to be one of the most valueble devices to an electronic technician and I would not think you'd regrett getting a nice unit but rather think you'd find loads of uses for it.
Have fun
BJ