I now have a new 1iPro2 on my io2 and a DTP 70. Everything that I have heard about the DTP 70 is that it is a superior spectro to the humble i1p2. Today I did a quick test on a 21x4 linearity chart. The attached chart from CTP tells the story. The first column is from the i1p2 in spot with two reads, the second is from the DTP, and the third is from the i1p2 in scan mode. The DTP shows a lower number on the deep blacks than the i1p2. That may well be true but I have no idea how to know which one is the more accurate. I would like to think that this is showing me the superiority of the DTP but it would be wishful thinking.
I have discovered the Chromachecker target which I can get for a mere $500. I'm wondering if that is the only choice as I don't want a service, I just want a chart with known values that I can use to compare.
What you did is showing you the difference between a pair of those columns, not accuracy. You don't say which two were used to derive the last column that contains the dE values. And by the way, for this kind of testing I would use dE(76) rather than dE 2000 - you are looking for simple differences, not differences adjusted for human visual perception.
To do accuracy testing you don't need to buy anything. You need a target with known reference values and you can construct this yourself in Photoshop (see my recent article on Extended Grayscale, this website), and the reference values will be the ones with which you create the patches. The objective of your exercise will then be to discover the differences between the reference values and the printed values read with the spectros. Make sure the reference values you choose are within the gamut of the profile you will be using to print the target. You would use the same printer, same paper, same profile, and make sure the Rendering Intent is set to Absolute. Then read the target with the DTP70. Read it again with the i1Pro2, subtract each of these from the reference values and you will see which set produces the lowest dE(76), and that will be the more accurate one.
If you use Enhanced Matte paper, as you know it is rich in OBAs, hence important with the i1Pro2 to retain the three readings M0, M1, M2 and select the one that produces the most accurate results. It would be preferable to do the testing with a PK paper (wider gamut) that contains no OBAs (eliminates this complicating variable).
Perhaps you aren't aware, because X-Rite is such a dreadful outfit when it comes to documentation, that when the i1Pro2 is is in scan mode, it reads 200 samples per second and averages them. So if you scan the patches at the rate of one per second, you have an average of 200 samples per patch. If you do spot readings, it will sample the whole area of the black hole that the light shines through, taking 200 samples and averaging them.
Given this kind of performance and the fact that there is a 5 years technological gap between these instruments, I would tend to expect the i1Pro2 to stand up very well to a DTP70, both being higher-end professional instruments, but not having worked with the latter I don't know - so the research you are doing is interesting (to see whether new technology means better in this case) and I for one shall be interested in any further results you develop.