Hey, it's been a couple of years. I am a little slooooow...

I've been "needing" a multimeter for a while now, just to explore what all these electrical gadgets around the house are actually doing rather than just hoping that nothing drifts with usage. Yesterday I got a Mullard 5ar4 for the U70 and I really like what I hear but I also hear that it's naughty to just put that thing in there without checking to see if the bias needs to be recalibrated (and, darn it, I think I hear a liiitle bit of non-euphonic distortion that wasn't there with the previous "inferior" tube). Going by the reviews of the punters on amazon, this one seems to be a good one,
http://www.frys.com/product/5213787?site=sr:SEARCH:MAIN_RSLT_PGThe thing that stopped me from just getting one of these is that in the notes that came with the U70 from Frank, he says that the dc meter should have a rating of 1000 ohms per volt or higher ("higher", I interpret to mean "more ohms per volt"). Now 1 volt/1000 ohms = 0.001 A, or 1 mA. So I interpret this as saying that the dc meter should be accurate to 1 mA.
In the same notes, he writes that the pair of tubes in each channel should put out 100 ma. This current will be measured as a 1.56 volt drop across a 15.6 ohm resistor, not as "100 ma" per se. But I still find reason to worry.

According to one of the numbers on that page, that would be cutting it kind of close:
DC amps Range/Resolution: 6.000 A / 0.001 A
Range/Resolution: 10.00 A / 0.01 A
You guys think this is good enough for this task? How about for general testing purposes for other things that one might want to know about the dacs, amps, preamps, etc.?