Bourns have also requested one of my uCurrent's so they can analyze further in their Taiwan facility, and the left-over parts I have too.
How that is going to help them is beyond me, they have a whole bloody reel of parts, and my uCurrent is irrelevant!
Dave.
My guess is that it's standard procedure to look at the customer's design to eliminate the possibility that the application is not causing problems running parts out of spec. Current-sensing R's can be subject to all kinds of abuse, and users won't necessarily understand the limitations of the parts they are using.
They probably haven't looked at the ucurrent design in any detail.
As regards testing, for a test instrument like this, I'd suggest that the minimum production test really should check zero and full-scale accuracy on all 3 ranges, as apart from the unlikely chance of bad parts, more common things like bad solder joints, PCB faults and wrong components can easily happen.
A full functional test pretty much eliminates the need for testing parts, as any part issues will surface.