I just picked up a 34465a multimeter on the cheap and on first glance it had very minimal issues. The rear cover plate was missing and there were errors in the error log. The errors were simple - clock battery dead, failed self tests. On initial disassembly, The clock battery was actually missing.
I installed a clock battery, ran full self tests and it passed with no errors. I unlocked the firmware for good measure as it was running 2.14.
Smooth sailing so far.
Then I saw it. There is an indent in the PCB where the bottom chassis screw dug into the PCB. The included screw was too long and the previous owner torqued it down.
The mounting hole is in direct line of sight to the PCB underneath the Ethernet jack. Seeing that definitely ruined my day.
The good news is that this area of the pcb doesn't look too critical, but it's hard to tell since I could not find a schematic for the 34465a and I don't have access to an xray machine.
I noticed that the unit had 2 tiny stickers on the front that labeled it as "bad usb." I tested it with a usb stick and I was able to read / write without issue. I am looking into how to test the usb port for consistency, maybe a sustained large file transfer or file transfer from internal memory to external usb. The last thing I want to do is attempt a usb firmware upgrade and have the unit completely bricked.
There's a good chance the screw tore some data-level traces underneath the Ethernet port. There clearly looks like multi-layer damage in that indent.
Does anyone have schematics for the 34461a / 34465a / 34470a or an xray machine I can borrow

Technically, this was purchased as a used unit off ebay. I still have a few days left for ebay coverage. I'm just gutted right now. uggh.
Here's the direct link to the 34461a multimeter teardown from dave jones:
https://flickr.com/photos/eevblog/9088123087/in/album-72157634225126018/I attached the image with the region of interest.
Thanks a ton!