Most coincidentally, I recently blew up my Fluke and was able to fix it! The internet, again, is incredible. (yeah, I know, buggy whips and all)
I think what I did, was I measured the output of a power supply I had built and I *just slightly* exceeded the 600 V input voltage.
Meter still worked on AC/DC volts, but on "ohms" the readout flipped back and forth from "0" to "K" to M' and was unusable. And, continuity beep was always on, always beeping.
You can talk to me all you want about bench meters...but I would bet that MOST meter use is just testing for continuity. Anyway, plenty of mine is. And obviously ohms is very important. I was in mourning for my beloved yet crippled Fluke meter. I've had this for getting on to 30 years. Great meter, and I haven't always treated it nicely.
Son_of_a_gun.
http://www.eevblog.com/forum/beginners/multimeterstroubleshooting-fluke-75iii-fluke-77-repairable-or-disposable!/
Searched for "troubleshooting Fluke 77" and found this forum. The last post (from Jan 19, 2011) shows a fat resistor which turns out to be a fusible input resistor. "About 1K"
So, I checked that "resistor" and found it open. Bridged the resistor w/a 1 K ohm resistor (yes, I know it is wrong to not have a fusible resistor there) and the meter started working again PERFECTLY. Measured some 1% resistors = dead on the money. \
Very thankful. I was anticipating "no problem, send it in and we can fix it, our minimum charge is $250 plus shipping". (Meter cost me a tad under $100 IIRC)