Here's a scan of the "RIM Electronic 1976" catalog pages concerning the Unigor A43 and its bigger brother the Unigor 6e.
The A43 is still a very common meter on ebay or on local flea markets, the 6e is much rarer, wich is understandable as it cost double the price of the A43. Note that one is sold a Metrawatt and the other under the Goerz brand name. After seeing Dave's
teardown it is clear that the same construction style was used on both these meters. Not only the outside looks extremely similar.
I do have a 6e in good condition, it's my goto meter whenever I want to use an analog meter. From a modern POV the build quality might look atrocious but considering that these meters were probably designed in the 60ies and were probably the first generation using PCB's, one shouldn't be so hard on them. They do still work after 40+ years, to me that is a sign of quality.
Can anybody shed some light on how BBC (Brown Boverie & Cie, not TV station), Goerz and Metrawatt were involved?
PS: Sorry, scans are in German.
PPS: Just looking at the technical data for the 6e I noticed it mentions the burden voltage in the amps ranges. There wouldn't be much point in Dave's µCurrent if modern meters were that good.