Calibrating vintage test equipment can require quite specialised knowledge. It often goes beyond adjusting a trimmer to get the needle pointing at a particular mark on the scale. The calibration procedures often specify particular instruments and references which might not now be on hand with proven calibration, e.g. to calibrate an AVO Valve Characteristic Meter you need to start out with a calibrated Avometer of the right model. If you use an alternative it is up to you to calculate the effect that might have on the procedure and results.
Repairing moving coil meters, the heart of most analogue instruments, is an art outside the scope of normal electronics practice. It is fine, skilled work equally or more exacting than watchmaking. I consider myself a good precision worker with a sensitive touch but the first two moving-coil instruments I tried to repair, I damaged through heavy-handedness. It felt like using a bulldozer to thread a needle.
The last company offering repairs to the special high-sensitivity movements in the AVO VCMs stopped years ago, so now if they fail (or are damaged through misoperation) one is obliged to modify the circuit to use an available, lower sensitivity alternative, i.e. hack an otherwise beautiful example of vintage test gear.
Vintage light meters can drift as the selenium cell ages. There is usually enough adjustment to bring them back into calibration.