I don't even have any instruments for testing amp draw, capacitance, and things like that. I'd have to buy one. First I'd have to know what I'm looking for when I go to the store lol.
The capacitance meter is a convenience when you have to deal with capacitors loosing their sapacitance, but you have to be familiar how it responds to other failures like elevated leakage or ESR or similar. Most of them tend to severely mislead you, if you do not check or count for it(in case of an intentional integrated safety bleeder resistor).
But it is not 100% necessary, as you may test the capacitors, even in a more reliable way (because being in direct control of the test method used).
So for lighting I would rate the instruments in following way (from the most important till the ones just "nice to have"):
- AC and DC voltmeter, rated at least 400VAC/1kVDC
- Continuity tester with beeper
- Ohm meter capable measuring down to 0.1 Ohm accuracy at resistances in the Ohms range, up to 10 MOhm
- AC A-meter, best a clamp meter
- Isolation quality tester (aka "MegMet" or similar names; 1kV test voltage should be far enough)
- "Cheat sheet" with various electrical equations, a calculator, stack os scratch papers and a few writing tools
- Real AC power measuring device (kill-a-watt,...)
- DC A-meter
- current limitting power source (a board with switchable incandescents of various power rating in series with the output; aka "Dim Bulb Tester", google what it means)
- isolating transformer (feeding your test socket)
- an oscilloscope (isolating transformer mentioned above is a must then!) And learn basics how to use it. Even 1MHz is enough (for mains frequenncy ballasts; 100MHz for electronic ones), but be sure you have 600V rated test probes for it.
- current probes for the oscilloscope (could be hacked out from some cheap clamp meter - add a signal output to it)
- for electronic ballasts:
- Diode test (uses to be part of common multimeters)
- ESR meter
- Only then are the various C and L meters