> What do you folks think, should I be thinking E-Bay old used Simpson 260
The 260 is a -passive- meter.
On Volts it is 20K/V, which means the 50V range is 1Meg impedance. That can be considerable loading in tube circuits.
A Vacuum Tube Voltmeter (VTVM) has been the bench standard for amplifier-hackers since the late 1950s. VTVMs are usually 11Megs impedance on all ranges.
Note that the "passive" 260 reaches 10Megs on its 500V range. So for higher tube voltages, it can be "as good as" a VTVM. If you read say 90V on the 500V scale, you are working below 1/5th of the scale and have to squint close to resolve better than 5%. However most tube-work is +/-20%, so close squinting is not required.
The 100mA and 500mA ranges are directly useful on tube power stages, and few/no classic VTVMs give you this function (except with external resistors and the Volts function).
If you do the modern custom of using 1-ohm resistors to sense current, neither the 260 nor the classic VTVM will closely resolve 0.046V (46mA, a possible bias target). That's strictly modern digi-meter territory. In the old days, we used 10 ohm resistors to sense current.
The 260's Ohms gets awful cramped above 1 Meg, but most meters do. (Some DMMs don't read over 1.99Meg; the 260 knows "open" from "10Meg".) The 260 easily reads below 1 ohm; many DMMs have an ohm of internal slack and some simply round-down anything less to "0.00".