What do you typically use it for (I mean aside from the obvious of using it to divide voltages). i.e. For what applications do you need a standalone precision divider like that?
I use it for meter calibration. The key thing about a Hamon divider (unlike other dividers) is that it is effectively self-calibrating. When you set the jumpers for divide by 2, you simply compare the voltages between Input Hi - Output Hi and Output Hi - Output Lo and make sure they are identical (which is easy, to whatever resolution instrument you have).
When you switch to Divide by 10 mode, you have confidence that it is an accurate divide ratio and can then use it with a voltage reference to calibrate two decades of your voltmeter. If you only have an accurate 10V reference for example (as my situation) you can calibrate the 10V range and then use the divider to calibrate the 1V range, based on the 10V reading. With a 2 decade divider, you can get even better certainty and range, by being able to calibrate the 100V range while cross checking it with your calibrated 10V range and freshly calibrated 1V range. In this way, you can leapfrog ranges and verify / calibrate them from a single known reference.
The limitation is the input resistance of the meter, it cannot significantly load the output of the divider. In my case, my Datron meters have 10G input resistance up to 20V so there is no significant loading of the 900R effective output resistance of my 10k divider. I can calibrate the 100V range with reference to the 10V one - because I can use an ordinary 100V PSU to drive both divider and meter - the meter's 10M input resistance on the 100V range has no consequence. With the 2 decade divider that I have, I can verify the 100V range and the 1V range against the 10V reference... or the 1V range and the 100mV range. Once I have confidence in the 1V range and the 100mV ranges, I can then step down again with an arbitrary PSU (eg 1.5V battery) to calibrate the 10mV range against the 1V and 100mV ranges.
There was recently an in-depth discussion on the effect of the divide by 2 / divide by 10 switch contact resistance on the certainty of the divide ratio (talking in very low ppm terms here). I used a terminal strip and hard screw-down links to minimise contact resistance on my 10k decade (see photo in the thread I linked).
Here's the contact resistance discussion:
https://www.eevblog.com/forum/metrology/absolute-divider-concept/msg2924250/Edit: Err, sorry, no this one:
https://www.eevblog.com/forum/metrology/influence-of-switch-resistance-in-hamon-dividers/