In 30 years, when I'm 100 years old, maybe I'll miss that second- somebody can dig me up and check! Now, avoiding voltnuttery; them's fightin' words! I'm still waiting for my inexpensive portable Josephson Junction device. I was hoping to get the lab under tighter temperature control, but it's about 9 degrees F outside and I still need to burn some wood, as the heat pump can't keep up at those temperatures. Don't assume "set it and forget it" when it comes to heat pumps and electric cars in the winter!
Things will improve over the next few days and today I'll get the reference set up. I don't have an 8.5 digit meter or a scanner, so I'll be doing manual comparisons between 5 voltage standards and the LTZ reference using the Fluke 845. Debating whether to hook everything to a small rotary switch for speed, or just move the wires by hand. I'm afraid the switch (small Grayhill gold plated rotaries) will introduce thermocouple issues. I've never been able to beat clean copper telephone wire in a binding post. Also, the 845 has an output that I could data log to record sub-ppm stuff, but I don't know how stable the 845 itself is. Maybe with a manual periodic zero check?