I made a setup to characterize litz wire performance, and am having some issues with measurement repeatability I can't explain. I'm using an Agilent 4285A (uncalibrated, but in good condition).
The DUT for now is a simple air core solenoid wound on an acrylic former. This DUT is just something I threw together to refine the measurement setup/procedure to my satisfaction. My intended frequency range is 100kHz-10MHz, measurement mode is Ls-Rs.
To make the connections from to the DUT as robust as possible, I use the 16047A test fixture instead of the kelvin clips. I also created little adapters boards which fit nicely in the "jaws" of the test fixture (see attached photo). These adapters are made of double sided copper clad, with the bottom/top layers (force/sense terminals) connecting at the far edge, which is also where I solder the litz wire for the DUT.
This setup seems much better than sticking the litz wire directly into the jaws of the 16047A, but I'm still seeing odd variability on the Rs result. For example, I plug in the DUT+adapter, and at f=1MHz I measure Ls=15.98uH +/- 0.05uH, Rs = 0.251 +/- 0.015ohm. But if I then wiggle the adapter a bit in the jaws, the Rs measurement will settle at a very different value, like Rs = 0.331ohm, but measurement noise is still +/- 0.015ohm.
I'm fairly certain the only thing moving is the adapter itself (the DUT coil is mounted rigidly and there's nothing nearby for it to couple to). The contact resistance on the four terminals is probably varying quite a bit, but my understanding is that so long as all four terminals of the instrument make "decent" contact with the adapter (i.e. impedance low enough that it doesn't cause clipping in the current drivers, or cause phase shift in the sense signals), it shouldn't affect the final measurement.
Another explanation is that strands of the litz wire are intermittently breaking as I wiggle the adapter. But if this were the case I would also see it affect DC resistance, and I've verified this isn't the case (used a 4263B for that).