Just curious.....
Presuming the schematic isn't generally available, has anybody tried reverse engineering the front end of the troublesome meter to see where the problem might be?
... and to then, perhaps, compare this to a comparable meter without such problems?
And this is why I asked about is this a money or a technical problem. Because if Keysight's EMC experts can't come up with a fix, it would very funny to pick one of these up and take a crack at it!
Who said Keysight's EMC experts can't come up with a fix? For all we have been told, they may well have.
Based on a typical Corporate approach, the difference between what their engineers know and what is being announced is likely to be a gulf that's so wide, it makes the Grand Canyon look like a crack in the sidewalk. What's being spouted here looks like 'damage control' ... as Dave said, "Classic corporate response". It's a pretty lame attempt when you consider the affected audience primarily consists of people that understand how the equipment works. Doing the arse-covering exercise is going to come from the legal and beancounter departments, with the marketing department being brought 'on-board'. Bugger the engineers.
I would be pretty comfortable to say that there will be at least one or two engineers there that have an idea on how to fix it. They might even have been allowed to spend some time putting together a fix, just to quantify the cost - but I doubt it. IF they have worked out something, I reckon they will have done so in their own time. But the fix (if it exists) will never see the light of day - officially (IMHO).
Doesn't matter if it's only a matter of changing a component or adding a bodge wire - the cost would be more than Keysight would want to spend. As soon as such an announcement were made, people would be expecting Keysight to fix it for them. Even if the fix itself took only 3 minutes, the logistics cost of receiving and returning the meters would not be insignificant.
The only way for something like this to come to light is if it were to come from a totally independent source - and don't expect Keysight to even acknowledge it.
However, the reality of the problem might mean the fix is a redesign of a section of the PCB - with different components and different circuit topology - which means a level of difficulty a couple of orders of magnitude higher. I tend to think this is closer to the truth than a simple component change ... but that's only a gut feel.