Hi,
Thanks for the responses.
I'm only asking about higher voltage measurements because even though I might not be probing anything that high, if I make a measurement somewhere there is upto 300Vs then I don't want to be toast. The Samsung 43" plasma I am looking at had a VS of 208V so I need to be able to safely encounter that. I assume if I am only measuring the Secondary side of most PC/TV/Monitor SMPS that I shouldn't encounter anything too high (>300V)?
How would the probes fail should I make a mistake - would they melt, explode or worse?
If they only melt I could wear some protective gloves, if explosive, then I would need to be wearing gloves, goggles and maybe a stab vest? Helmet too?

I'm still waiting on a price quote from Tektronix used selection for a P6131 so I will see how they fare for price.
I've managed to buy a new P6139A which the Tektronix Centre of Excellence claimed would be compatible.
I will recommend to use the recommended probe for the scope and not to buy a new probes.
Like the P6131.P6133 or P6106... maybe also the P6139A.
Of course all this probe are already absolute.
For simple single ended probe we have the P6139B. (500Mhz 10X BNC cost tek price 353GBP.
This is the only probe that may be compatible with the scope.
I think the item I have secured on eBay was a total including shipping from a UK seller of around the £70 mark but I don't think it had a grabber on it. Way more than I wanted to be paying, but the auction was ending and I hadn't read this page at that point.
So is the general consensus is that most probes will handle up to 300V Cat II regardless of most other specifications, but I should be suspect of the cheap Chinese or no brand probes claiming to be rated that high? Or expect bad things when they do fail?
How would the cheap Chinese grabbers attached to Tek probes hold up with upto 300V?
Thanks for the help, I'm a novice when it comes to electronics and test equipment, but I'm interested in learning and hope to learn enough to start making a lot of good lasting repairs and maybe even second wage in the long term.