I think I will need a stable divider by 2 and the stable LTC2400 for long term stability. Otherwise you will need some switching between different divider, I think.
The idea is to switch the same divider between two input voltages 10V and 7V, in that case the divider accuracy and long-term drift does not matter, and even the long term stability and accuracy of the reference for the LTC2400 does not matter. What matters is the stability of the LTC2400 ratio measurements (should be very good) and the noise on the measurements (so there will be a compromise between the speed and accuracy - if you reduce the noise by averaging you increase the drift influence from the reference and the divider). For the best result a by-stable relay can be used for switching however a solid state switching should also be possible with a little bit of trickery to get it's impedance out of the loop.
Cheers
Alex
In this approach an additional divider for the reference of the LTC2400 is needed or a second short term stable reference. But that shouldn't be a problem. Also a nice idea
You eleminate the long term drift of the LTC2400 and the divider, but the LTC2400 should be very linear for this approach. Jim Williams and Andreas showed that is possible.
A buffer (LTC2057 for example) at the output of the CMOS switch should be enough to get rid of the switch impedance, I think.
I've drawn my idea on a whiteboad. Perhaps, it was not clear to everyone due to my crude english
(the left part is only the LM399 1mA current source the right part behind the dashed line is the AutoCAL circuit).
Another adavantage of the higher digital supply is the easy application of a 5V DAC on the 10V output.