Before taking any more measurements: check the Kelvin clips and connectors for damage and do an open / short offset calibration after changing the measurement frequency.
I think I know what I´m doing since 22yrs, but thank you for the advices.
You should not get any readings which exceed the LCR meter's accuracy specification with those capacitors.
This was already proved, at 1 and 10khz you get results which are very familar in comparison with the two other LCRs.
At 100khz it´s drifting a little bit, but it´s still in the specs of every LCR.
What the displaying capacitance value concerns.
But that wasn´t the point in this thread.
Mainpoint starts with the statement of a user, after several recommendations to go for the DE5000, that this LCR is a good one, but have problems on 100khz.
The "problem" turned out to be a probably wrong display of the D-factor in the 100Khz range.
This is irrelevant in more ways than one, but it does give the impression that the LCR has a flaw.
Yes, in theory it is -BTW, I found out, that the U1733C got this too.
But in practice...
Point one:
You won´t measure µF caps with 100khz - why should you.
Point two and most important:
The resolution of the D-factor display itself.
"0.001" - If you exclude the basic digit errors, this would be the highest resolution.
0.001 or 1x10-³...
This resolution is useless for foilcaps.
So if the LCR shows "nonsense" at 100khz or "0.000", it´s the same:
You can´t see the real value.
Same when you use lower testfrequencies, the usually ones for foil caps in µf-range, 1 or 10khz.
You´ll see "0.000" or "0.001"
Therefore it is a problem in theory, not a real one which can stop you buying the DE5000.
Displaying the capacitive value was never the issue here.