I find that an inexpensive multimeter is sufficient for my ebike work, even for testing internal cells on batteries. I have several of the free Harbor Freight meters and a more expensive $20 model. Used to have a Hewlett Packard, but it died.
An RC wattmeter is useful if you're testing batteries. These things are horribly uncalibrated, but once you compare it against an accurate source, it's handy to see what kind of currents are flowing. Also measures peak amps, voltage droop.
https://www.ebay.co.uk/itm/234473396262?hash=item3697b41826:g:WJYAAOSwsXRi2PK4&amdata=enc%3AAQAHAAAAoKoXsToCZz5C9Sf7rN4Zwxlx4wtwmkAGydWdejctc%2BgumFpY9%2BVhGZXngvUJixZVUVsaB9aUFth4hxC2fioUbP5%2FZoAEDcEJ76fPEbMTA26M7D6BbmNS2eqxYYL5W1fHJ8d%2BwEsUn7Cw75OurbR4XuyU%2FPDuio7V7spOxtvqSQaCNua%2Fsh%2B7ODA%2FtrLTEOC%2B6CjCZ6n3SfOj08Xw9%2FgiVVQ%3D%7Ctkp%3ABk9SR571lIntYA
If you're trying to recover cells to build batteries, don't bother. But if you insist, then you probably need a capacity tester to find out how many mah is in that cell. I have a Littokala 500S, but the 500 is cheaper. You might have to ask around to see it it's worth paying for the 500S.
https://www.ebay.co.uk/itm/304576258390?hash=item46ea28e156:g

I0AAOSwJNNi1-Rc&amdata=enc%3AAQAHAAAA4P5HNXx1A2UD1%2FdV4KfgMCoDSj2pvLwcX4F9RnlwTqmOneTyScu2wAWnjYbNsLcs4HCyQtZAHoACjx3cFhNfHptr4Cv27YsjkU%2F0iNXAAHUU%2BmKYynjMfcM8m%2F%2BvzA5VkImuW63dlz3Ywgl7YTJ7qSnzeKPBMjbHvonZVctHVoX6naD3oGt1gmk1Wc3HBvRvRS%2FP1jV%2BtS5W8Y5WliQ%2F57JI5EVC10bHniY5TI%2FGoyLiF%2BUDXS3PDWiB1f3AHwE9cY5y6tS3QVDybnamRAJkvgYQCeK%2FuMYSQpgI55w5zzGL%7Ctkp%3ABFBM2pbDie1g
And knowing that the used cells you bought really are 2400 mah isn't enough to tell you that they will work for an ebioke. Your need a series reistance tester like the YR-1035. This is really precise. You can read your cells down to 41.717, or three decimal places.
https://www.ebay.co.uk/itm/195066159044?hash=item2d6ad95fc4:g:7UUAAOSwJRBihd66&amdata=enc%3AAQAHAAAA0EjwWqc9OGoStNQW04pbsYLQ7t3zxYvAxsHzPxDsbpRDL66yFIoQ0mf08nEcSeYwn%2FdDaIZBOYYOxf9Pd27shjp%2BHSczBZ9kJBL%2BKDfZ7oCZj1qFqiXoC8SVssk8u1zeLhuB5BC6UW2oFdGS0BPkVEQfsrd%2BSU0mqOBrz0T%2F%2FHNAknDsckksHgNggVYM%2BaIQeuTgV1n3218NNR52m%2FBs60YG%2B3yXslrC180Ug4oqLDV0ofePjlEWwij%2F3b%2BuzNFPcym7aqRdDM74NS7rszeTQi4%3D%7Ctkp%3ABFBM_NH7ie1g
It's an endless rabbit hole. I think a good way to get low cost ebike batteries is to buy used packs from a failed scooter/ebike rental company. Quite a few of those in the USA. I've picked up 36V 10AH packs for $25USD that work well, and they are rugged.