I also have a Wejex. It originally came with a step wedge of only 11 steps so I tore that out and put in a small Stouffer that has 21 steps.
That is interesting about the 11 step wedge in the Wejex. Mine came with a 21 glued in under the glass. I was able to measure all the steps with the densitometer, saving me the pain of trying to replace the stepwedge.
It seem like my Wejex gives a 1 second exposure (I think the shutter is only open for about 1 second of the entire buzzing cycle) but I will time it exactly to make up a comparison chart between the Wejex and EG&G.
If reciprocity failure is of any concern probably depends on how one is using the sensitometry data.
This is a quote from Kodak:
"The Reciprocity Law usually applies quite well for exposure times of 1/5 to 1/1000 second for black-and-white films. Above and below these speeds, black-and-white films are subject to reciprocity failure. When the law does not hold, underexposure and change in contrast occur."
Seems to indicate "some change in contrast can occur" also. In real life conditions I suspect any change in contrast between 1/125 of a second and 1 second would be very small in comparison to big changes in contrast like comparing N to N+1, N-1, etc. (True, experts out there?)
Either way, in my system I don't think the sensitometer exposure duration affects anything because I am just checking slopes of film "known to be processed correctly" (ie prints fine at 35M 35Y or so) and comparing it to an "unknown" film/developer combination. I kind of wanted to speed up the process of testing out new developer/film combinations. That is to say, the only question I am trying to answer is "What development time should I try for this new film/developer combination so that I can print the negatives on variable contrast paper and get good prints like I get with old favorites x,and y." So nothing to do with ISO, EI, Speed, Zones, Expansion, Contraction etc.
I would be interested in knowing how others are using their sensitometers.