No, I don't think you want too much. I would like to have it too.
But I wonder - what do you people who have 8 1/2 digit meters do with set-up, cables and measurement calculation (adding a loop to zero potential or ratio scaling or ...).
I have (after a discussion elsewhere in the forum) checked that the 6 1/2 digit Agilent 34401A quite clearly indirectly measures a 10 Ohm series resistor between a voltage source and the meter (5 Ohm is also detected, but 1 Ohm disappears in noise). With 10 MOhm input impedance 10 Ohm is 1ppm. So this effectively renders the DMM as a 7 1/2 digit (19.999 999) resolution (not accuracy) instrument in RS232 mode for 10 V DC.
Today I got a board from Geller that came in at 10.00009 Volt (very happy - means my meter is well within 10 V DC spec - last calib 2003). The reference is stable to 5 decimal points (1ppm for 10 Volt) when averaging the last 10 readings. It suddenly hit me I wanted to check with shorter and better cables. Result: 10.00012 Volt. We are talking about 30 microVolt or 3ppm change as a result of lower cable resistance and better contact/connection (fleabay banana to crocodile). I would have guessed around 1 microVolt [10V in 10 MOhm is 1 microAmpere in max 1 Ohm cable resistance is some 1 or less microVolt]. But I have checked and rechecked, so it might be bad connection, thermocouple effect and .... (I don't know). On another pair of cables the effect was less than 10 microVolt.
So I guess measuring at 1ppm and below level is not just like start the meter and read ...? I would like to hear a tale of measuring and verifying with a control calculation on sub ppm level ...