If you don't need the features and price of the 117, I can vouch the 114 does a good enough job in Low-Z as the 289.
The 114 is my go to 'idiot' meter, it has no current inputs or fuses to think about
and good enough for quickie troubleshoots
They go cheap used, people sell them off to upgrade to feature filled 117, 87V, Brymen, Keysights, etc
and miss the point of a simple meter with the basics Low-Z, AC, DC, Min Max, Ohms/Buzzer
and according to Mr. Smith's exhaustive tests, a fair 'resistance' to ESD styled -BANGS!-
fwiw I can be 'less careful' with using both the 114 and non Low-Z 101, flanked by two clamp meters,
gloves, glasses, rubber boots, diligence...

and so far they've kept my pocket healthy
FYI for battlers that just want an entry level 'LOW-Z' capable meter that's affordable, and worked well for me before the Flukes rocked up, the Klein CL3200 won't break the bank,
and came with a nice zippered pouch, great leads and croc/alli adapters.
Still have it, doing tool box #3 duty nowadays
