I've been a hobbiest since I was about 10. I still play, but the enthusiasm has died greatly after doing it for a living all my life (I'm 46 ;).
As a hobby, electronics can be a great means of keeping you from a boring day job, or to prepare you for further training. In my time, you could hope to get a job repairing electronics (stereos, TVs, VCRs). Now, the replacement cost of consumer equipment is pretty much nothing, so you do well to have a plan for an education and an industry.
I don't know what your finances are, but one of the easiest ways to get started is to purchase a lab station. They typically have a meter, power supplies, a solderless breadboard, and a few extra nicities, like a signal generator.
As to the tools:
-I've made great utility out of telephone wire - very cheap.
-A small combination needle nosed plier + cutter from Sears served me for years - Just make certain that it closes nicely before buying it.
-There are many varieties of screwdrivers. If you like to tear down equipment for parts, you'll probably want to be choosy about the tip. Pawn shops are a good place for these
- Working without a meter is working blind. Again, pawn shops are a good place to look. Fluke is a good brand, and if it happens not to be the auto-ranging kind, that may be better. Some of those old Flukes were very accurate and under priced.
- Building you're own power supply can be fun, and you'll have it until you get bored (or rich). A small stereo is a great place to scavenge the parts. Power cord, fuse, transformer, capacitors, and a nice large heat sink are all in one package :-)
- A cheap soldering iron will give you nothing but misery. Without temperature regulation, they overheat and the tips go bad very quickly. So, If you get stuck with a cheap iron, keep it cold except when using it. Also, keep a wet pad nearby to clean the tip with. Harsh chemicals and abrasives quickly wear off the outer layer of a tip and it degrades quickly after that.
- Good solder is a must. Lead free is available, but next to useless. Ersen multicore is a good brand. Also some solder wick (to remove solder) and some flux. Flux will greatly help and can make old wick like new.
- If I were looking for a beginner scope, I choose an old analog scope that still has a bright, focused trace and probes. The price of probes can eat you up, so treasure them. Many old scopes have dirty controls. That's really not as bad as it seems. With a can of cleaning spray, a bit of care, and some patience, you can coax many more years out of a scope that was ready for the heap. This is an ebay / pawn item. I wouldn't pay more than 200-250
Best of luck. If you choose to hop on the train, I wish you a great ride.
- Mike