I never detected a really noticeable difference when using the meter, I suppose one could test and prove/disprove the differences. For me it was not a real factor in my photographic results.Pan films differ from one another in specific spectral sensitivity. Then you've got the Orthopan and opposite extended red pan outliers, not to mention actual Ortho films.
So "in general" might be just too generalized a concept.
And I guess, that by people who simply wouldn't detect the difference, and accept just "good enough" results, your opinion would include Hollywood cinematographers who make their living depending on highly predictable meter results? There's a reason most preferred out-of-the-box Pentax Digitals for their spot metering work. A few did use the ZVI modified ones, and a few used both styles. But the unmodified ones were the industry standard. There's a reason there's an IRE scale on them instead of a silly Zone sticker.
That is a good point, I found my specialized filters for my telescope aged poorly over time.But how do you recalibrate something after a period of time to an institutional standard if it's put together on a different premise? Those internal filters fade. All those modified ones are old by now. But all four of my straight Pentax ones still read exactly the same over their full scale, with only two minor recalibrations needed between the lot over the past four decades.
I loved the Brilliant FB paper and used it exclusively until it couldn't be had anymore. The company that made it for him is no longer. Really miss that stuff. I have his Cold Light and compensating Enlarger timer and it will need to be pried from my cold dead hands before I give it up. I started my 4x5 adventures with a Mahogany/Gold Zone VI 4x5, really liked everything about it EXCEPT the weight. When I got back into the hobby after a 10 year hiatus I opted for a Nagaoka 4x5, one inch thinner and a few pounds lighter. Currently running a Tachihara.I had my own dealings with Fred. Wonderful Brilliant Bromide Paper. Still use his compensating development timer. Tried his ZVI tripods - big disappointment. Never have and never will consider his modified meters an "improvement". A patent medicine wagon style salesman, yes, but polite and informative over the phone. An interesting guy, that's for sure. I wish someone had cloned him, if for sake of a revival of Brilliant paper alone.
I just dug out my Zone VI Workshop 1974, the last chapter is a list of products. "We leave nothing to chance. We test every meter for linearity, accuracy, and color sensitivity before we ship."
There is no mention of modifications to the meters, only calibration to spec.
Fred was an interesting guy, highly opinionated and very full of himself, but as you said polite and full of information, one just needed to sift through it.

That's a very interesting fact, Paul, and I don't doubt your statement... but what conclusion should we be drawing from it?
This is the era, mid-1980's, that I'm more familiar with (see page 10):

OK, yeah my book is 1974 and Pentax was included, only the Soligar blue which had been released at time of publication.
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