My only reference resistors (that I trust) are a 100 ohm L&N that I had measured some years back, and a Guildline 10 ohm that's lost its oil, like the one in the tear down thread. As far as I can tell, the L&N box is still within spec, but I don't have a good fractional ohm resistor I trust for comparison. NIST seems to be good at scaling things over large ranges, but I get nervous beyond 10X.
The L&N box has two metal plates that I thought were owner tags, but looking closer I think they're the L&N tags. The top one is two lines, "L.T." followed by "4171". Below that is a similar tag "Sp. Inst." The only other marking is "2377" stamped on the side of one of the taper keys, and a pencil notation inside the case I'm not sure about. I can also see the tape residue next to the cal sticker from a previous one, so it likely went back to L&N on a regular basis. I bought it at a hamfest decades ago when such things were being cleaned out of local businesses and universities. I seem to remember there were several of them, and they had trouble selling them at all. It's big and heavy. When I get a chance, I'll post some pictures of the insides. The 0.001 step section is basically a manganin bar with taps that's been filed slightly between taps to trim it. The rest is fairly conventional. I may also have a photo of a nice L&N knife-style reversing switch.
Another question- can an accurate ratio transformer be used in an AC measurement to compare resistors? Or are the big wound reference resistors so bad, even at 1 kHz or so, that it's not a good method?