At one point I used mostly two cameras, a Nikon F and a Canonet QL, at more or less opposite ends of the build spectrum (not that a Canonet is bad, it's just not a tank). Both bought used. I felt I could tell which negatives came from which because the Nikon F had absolutely dead regular frame spacing and the Canonet was less regular. Frames never overlapped but they got close. The only thing it affected was that I had to take more care when cutting the developed film into strips.
Some or many camera manuals advise that after winding the first stroke to seat the film on the takeup spool and closing the back, you should wind the rewind knob backwards to take slack out of the film. Then wind to frame 1. (I just looked at a Nikon F3 manual, for ex, and it shows this procedure.) I hardly ever remember to do this, or see anyone else do it. I'm not sure it would even be compatible with a QL=quickload mechanism. However, I wonder if that slack may affect frame spacing.