Same here, first time I used each of my spring mics, I checked with calipers, on the first one I checked with a 1-2 mic as well.  Now what I do is after the first measurement I just check with calipers at the height I am playing.  However, realize with springs, even at a 400 lb rate, .01 is only 4 lbs, it's not the same as measuring oil clearances.
With all other stuff, I do the same as Brent, stick a standard in it before I start and any time I don't like what I am seeing I do it again.  With a bore gauge, I check zero in the mic before every hole, and same thing, if I don't like what I see, first step is check mic, check zero on gauge, and go from there.  
Amazingly, room temp causes me more fits on a cold day than anything.  Nebraska winters I have to let the shop warm up or bore gauges go wonky
This is one of those "takes longer to type than to do" posts, you get in a rhythm that includes check periodically and check when the loose nut running the tool gets an odd number.
As far as the spring tester.  I have a set of springs Brent tested for me when we were comparing tools, they tested the same on mine when I bought it.  I toss one of those on the tester if I don't see the numbers I expect, but name brand springs have been pretty consistent lately.