... What resistor and procedure do you use chuckb? ...
My setup includes a large metal cast box, an RC filter for the Applied Voltage and two Kapton heaters to change temperature.
I use a a Hammond 1550H enclosure, it is roughly 100mm tall, 140mm wide and 200mm long. The current output connector is a Triax connector with two small alligator clips on the inside. Smaller caps are suspended in mid air by the connector leads. Larger caps rest on a teflon sheet covering the bottom of the box. The metal cover of the box has to be fastened down or a weight applied to keep it from moving. Any moving metal will add noise to the readings.
The Excitation voltage from the K617 passes through a 200k resistor and a 100ufd PE cap for 20 sec of RC filtering. This reduces the apparent current flow caused by voltage noise on one side of the cap. All charging and discharging of the cap under test happens through the 200k resistor.
The metal box sits directly above the K617 to keep the leads short. The triax is fixed in place so it does not move around and cause noise.
I attached two round 75mm dia. kapton heaters to the outside of the metal box. At 10V they draw 2 amps total. This 20W of heat raises the box temperaure up to 63 deg C. If the box is 63C the capacitor inside will eventually reach 63C. I usually wait an hour for the cap to catch up to box temperature before I start a test. The box is covered with a heavy cloth for insulation. I measure the box temperature with a handheld Fluke Termocouple thermometer. I do not try to measure the capacitor temperature directly as this would upset the current leasurements.
With smaller caps the meter input current temperarily changes when the K617 changes ranges. With some caps, if I leave it in Auto Range, the meter can go into RANGE oscillation. For these caps I watch the display and manually change the ranges. The meter could use a little more hysterysis on the Auto Range change.
I have a Agilent GPIB to USB adapter and software to collect and store the data from the test.