I will get some photo's when I do the tests - I have just been making up some leads and making a little shielded box out of brass shim sheet. I am going to do some simple temperature tests on the Genrad capacitor and the Russian capacitor. All Genrad/IET say is that type 1409 capacitors at 23deg +/- 5 deg C, they should be within specifications. For the Genrad caps, that was often 0.05% and the newer IET 1409 capacitors, you can get 0.02%. No temperature coefficient curves are published, so I am curious.
I think the specifications are pretty conservative. It came from the factory with the standard capacitor adjusted to 0.001% and probably has never been adjusted since. In spite of this, I am pretty sure it is still within the 0.01% accuracy.
The quality is fantastic. The custom made switches have a light quality feel and are designed so they should never need maintenance. They still seem to be perfect after 50 years. The last two digits is a vernier dial connected to a custom 1.4 ohm resistive slider across transformer winding and they are constructed to be accurate to 1%. It is quite good having the last two digits as a dial as it is better then switches for tweaking. The bridge can get pretty clear nulls even down to the 1pp level. Readings seem very stable and repetative.
The Genrad bridges are masterpieces of design and you would probably still go for one first, but the ESI is very impressive.
The huge problem with all these transformer bridges is just they are so incredibly big and heavy. It sits in the garage most of the time, and occasionally comes out. I do love the concept of precision transformer bridges though. Basically the transformer cannot lose accuracy. The oscillator does not have enough power to ever damage the bridge windings, so as long as the switches are good, all I need is one accurate reference capacitor and I can calibrate the bridge with one adjustment. There is a small hex screw on the front panel that allows the standard capacitor to be adjusted +/- 0.03%. Strait after calibration, it is probably accurate to near 0.001%.
Concerning the calibration, I am trying to come up with a plan for a quadrature bridge, so I can precisely calibrate a capacitor from a resistor. It should be possible to make a quadrature bridge with a 10ppm precision. I need two sinewaves of exactly the same amplitude (within a few ppm) and exactly 90 degrees phase difference - I think I have worked out a plan to do that. Unfortunately, I may be forced to use a FPGA to realize my concept. I hope to find a way to avoid that.