Sorry for the bad quality of the picture..
For decades, I used multi contact cables LK4-B, with PVC isolation, and gold plated LS4 plugs, which were cold-welded to the Cu cables, and KT4-B isolation grip. They were 25cm and 50 cm long, and give low thermo electric voltages on the order of 1..2µV. The plugs can be stacked.
Disadvantage are the bad isolation of PVC, therefore cables can't be twisted for Ohm measurements, no shield, and normally can be used only up to 60V
Recently, I got metrology grade PTFE cable, I think it is Belkin, 22 AWG Cu, silver plated.
I assembled them myself, by crimping gold plated spades, fitting the 3458A, or soldering these LS4 plugs. All cables have a shield, very high isolation of >10
14 Ohm, and withstand > 1kV.
I have several sets for DCV and 2W/ 4W Ohm measurements.
The crimped versions show a few 100nV e.m.f., the plug version again around 1µV.
Additional hint: DCV measurements of e.g. 7 /10V references have a systematic problem, i.e. to cancel the e.m.f. because you can't short the source.
The metrological trick is to take a set of 16 samples, then another set with reversed polarity at the D.U.T.
The 3458A, especially when calibrated for zero and 10V gain, has extremely good linearity also at reversed input. Therefore, the difference of both values divided by two gives quite precisely the true voltage of the D.U.T. w/o e.m.f. , and the sum divided by two gives the e.m.f.
That procedure gives reproducible results also for the lower grade cables, therefore it's more important than the cables used.
Inside my references, I use hard-lacquered Cu wire of I think 200µm diameter, not twisted.
Frank