Do you just want to see how much mine change? My guess is meters like the my free one don't change. They just can't read down low enough to detect the offset. Better meters like my Bymen and Gossen, I expect would shift the most counts. The TPI, UNI-T and CEM I would expect to shift less (less digits).
Or are you just wanting to know going forward if I can show this as part of the testing?
I wonder mainly about UT181a and of course upcoming GW121.
And as part of your future testing it would be nice to know more about meters.
I know now that 2 counts difference is probably normal and common, but I would like if there was no count difference at all when interchanging the probes.
All meters are tied together to one start point then to the Fluke standard. Shown with 10 and 1V. As you would expect the Brymen and Gossen have the worse count change but again they do gain a digit. I did not run the free Harbor Freight meter but hard to believe meters like that would detect anything.
I did not run the 121GW because I am attempting to run a different test with it. One thing to keep in mind with that meter is first, it's not in production. Anything I show with the meter may not represent how the final product behaves. Another is that because that meter can measure power, there may be more test cases you want to run. And finally, I did damage the meter which may also play into it.
Also, I should mention that the Gossen is no longer factory stock. It does have those Netic and copper shields installed to help stabilize it. Of course, the UNI-T is also highly modified to get the thing to survive the grill starter. The Brymen was damaged during testing and I had to repair it, so it too is not factory fresh. The TPI is damaged with the controller IC appearing to have one or more pins with high leakage currents. The CEM was also damaged during testing and needed to be repaired. Just keep in mind that the meters as shipped from the factory may behave differently.