I bought one of the AquaChek meters recently after reading many good and bad reviews for them, but I got to thinking that if I am going to trust a strip where all I can do is guess at what chemical level the water is by my guess at the shade of the strip, I may as well trust something that will test the color for me and then give me a digital reading to go by.
About the most helpful and common sense tip I read was that after OR before each testing, take a Q-tip dipped in distilled water and clean the window of the meter so it will clean away any residue from the last contact with the spa/pool water. You should get a reading about as accurate as possible after doing that.
Another important step is to place the end of the strip into the window area at a 45* angle rather than laying the strip in the window and sliding it up to the stopping point. This also made sense to me.
Another reason I chose to buy the AquaChek meter is that people with health issues such as diabetes, trust this type of instrument every day with their life, so I guess I can trust it with my spa water.
I know that you've had a meter longer than I, so I'm not trying to preach to the choir.
But addressing your issue, I'll add that I also figured I'd use advice that I've heard health care professionals give; don't use multiple scales when you are trying to loose weight. Use one scale all the time. Different scales will most likely give you different readings. So with that, if you use different sources to measure the chemistry of your water, you'll most likely get different readings from the same sample.