I've worked on that project slowly over half a year now and at last the reference is boxed and working quite well. It is built on a bit of a stripboard and as I only have enough bits to build one more, I am not planning to make a pcb for it. Most components are from eBay, the main exception is Pomona CuTe connectors. The reference is very simple, containing the LT1021CMH chip, a 20K multi-turn pot, few resistors and diodes for an additional temperature compensation (without it the tempco was over 10ppm/C, now it is around 1ppm/C), a reverse polarity protection diode on the P/S connector, a P/S capacitor, an LED, a 3-position switch and a nice VBF 10K/1.111111K divider in a hermetic case. This unit can provide 10V, 1V, 10K and 1K reference values with a reasonable accuracy and (hopefully) a decent long-term stability (better than 50ppm looks about right). The switch connects the output terminals to the voltage reference in one position, disconnects it in the middle and shorts the terminals in the third position. The divider is wired permanently to the output terminals providing 1V reverence from 10V output, so with the voltage reference disconnected, the resistance between two red terminals is either 10K or 1K. I will now measure the voltage and resistance values over a period of time (probably a couple of weeks) and my plan is to use this unit as a travelling reference. There is a space left for an output buffer to give the reference better load capabilities and a better short-circuit protection (right now it will survive a short, but most likely would suffer a hysteresis shift after that) so I will install it as a next step.
Cheers
Alex