"Re: How to test pots? Just de soldered using wick for first time"
Here is one place where an analog (volt or ohm, but the point is: a test meter) meter is neater than a DVM...but not absolutely req'd.
Pots can fail in about 3 or 4 or 5 ways. All of which you can detect with an volt/ohmmeter, but it is also worth your time IMHO to play with a battery and a resistor and a pot and your meter to acquire a better-than-intellectual feel for what a pot does; how it acts, and how your particular meter acts/reads out the variable resistance as you, yourself, vary it with your fat fingers. Like if you were a kid fooling around with it. Totally serious, this is what we call an "acquaintance" exercise. In general, they are pretty rugged devices. For a pot to work and be your friend it has to:
1: Have an end-to-end resistance sort of resembling its rated value. This can be WILDLY off. +/-20% is very common. One way pots fail is to have the "horseshoe" of res mat'l break...so they open up from term 1 to 3. Under these conditions, it is possible that the wiper will work, for SOME PART of the pot's rotation. Because the crack in the horseshoe mat'l is usually a hairline crack, and the "point" of the wiper will, as you turn the pot slowly, work-work-work-work NOT WORK oncce it gets to the "far" side of the crack.
2: The wiper has to make contact all the way from one end of the pot rotation to the other. It's common for a pot to genrally work but be very noisy and herky-jerky at one or both ends. Sometimes the wiper opens up completely and makes NO contact with the horseshoe. VERY rare in my experience, but I acknowledge that import parts can fail in ways that traditional, domestic parts never even thought of.
3: Pots also have a "taper" which will not prevent them from working if you have the wrong kind...I will not address that here.
4: The wiper has to maintain smooth contact at all positions, or it will produce static or noise in the circuit. This is by far the most common fault---a piece of dirt gets in there and the pot gets "scratchy". Deoxit or other "pot spray" is the cure.