I've been a UKVRR member for about 10 years and used to have several Avo 8s of differing marks (revisions). There were a lot of different Avo 8 models - the "Mark" number is important, plus there were high-voltage, GPO/BT & MOD variants amongst others. Even, Heaven forbid, braille versions...
The meter movement is extremely delicate and sensitive - you should not interfere with it yourself. It's carefully calibrated using, ISTR, lumps of iron. Don't play with it.
Ask on UKVRR - lots of helpful folk there.
The meter is not great by modern standards - even the cheapest digital meter is better at most things. The Avo is good at doing "true RMS" current and for repairing valve radios etc. where the manufacturer's service sheets give voltages etc. that were measured with an Avo or equivalent - Avos have a very low input impedance by modern standards - 20,000 ohms per volt, compared with a digital meter (DVM) which will be fixed at around 10,000,000 ohms, i.e. it won't vary depending on the range setting of the meter.
When testing old kit a DVM will read accurately but appear too high compared with an Avo as a DVM barely loads the circuit under test whereas an Avo can really pull down voltages. If your service sheet data expects you to be using a 20K ohms/volt meter, i.e. an Avo, that's what you should use.
The corollary of this is that Avos are poor (inaccurate) at measuring high impedance sources.
I have just the one Avo left for exactly that reason.
EDIT: Avos also use old types of batteries for the ohms ranges - these are now difficult & expensive to obtain - you can make your own from coin cells, but it's just yet another annoyance.
(*) A decent modern DVM will also do "true RMS" but to handle non-sinusoidal well you'll need a Fluke/Keysight etc bit of kit. Note that unless you're an electronic engineer, none of this matters much!