With my Robart I found the bearing on the pointer inadequately smooth for the tiny angles we are attempting to measure. I assumed the motion of the pointer would be smooth and continuous if I rocked the meter slowly back and forth, but it was not. The bubble level seemed more useful, though not quantitative for angles other than dead level.
Once the flaps and elevator are installed, taking measurements is difficult at best. On the tail I suppose you can use strips of balsa and rubber bands to immobilize the stab(?)
Brett Buck once said, "an incidence meter can tell you what you have but not what you need."
And given the great difficulty of fixing faulty incidence on a finished planes of most designs (if cranking in a little down elevator doesn't do it), maybe some form of variable incidence stab might be an answer.
Kim Mortimore