I believe i threw away a fluke, vacuum tube volt meter kelvin varley divider. Not much use for them anymore.
Its high side 40k ohm resistors were matched pretty well. 4 of them in a bridge configuration, with a 9v battey exciting the bridge and a cheap strain gauge amplifier (aka a 1kg drug scale) across the bridge.. zeroing the scale.. and heating one of the resistors with a soldering iron.. it didnt even move. 0.1ppm or better temperature coefficient, easily.
Now regarding measuring 1 ohm to 10ppm.
Buy or make yourself some 1ppm resistors on the order of 1 ohm. Test 4 of them in a bridge configuration.
Buy yourself a legit strain gauge amplifier. Why? For the 10ppm drift you dont want.
Long time ago I described in detail how to take any common digital scale, add two resistors, one of them variable, and you have yourself a milliohm meter. Its as accurate as the linearity of the resistors due to thermal effects of the current flowing during the test.
I found that a cheap 1kg scale was able to handle 140 ohm resistors to load the resistor under test and full scale of 1kg was 0.1 ohms. Yielding 0.1 milliohm resolution. I dont recall a single reply.
I think people didnt understand that the accuracy is maintained. The strain gauge amplifier is maintaining a constant voltage gain,(probably a chopper stabilized opamp) but its internal adc is using the voltage supplied to the bridge as a reference.
Essentially if you can compare any two resistors to each other, it doesn't matter what their value is.
There is no need to spend thousands for a miliohm meter certified for 10ppm if you can buy a strain gauge amplifier for a tenth of that
For 1uV =1 ppm resolution you will need 1 amp through your test resistor. Well within the range of a sensitive strain gauge amplifier.