First of all: I'm not an metrology expert in terms of uncertainty calculations. Therefore, I might be wrong on some points here.
I'm certainly not either, but I guess that's pretty obvious!
Fluke did it in the extended spec datasheet of the 8508A. Perhaps they add it in the final version of the datasheet? I don't know.
I think one cannot the compare the 3458A datasheet. HP says one have to add 2ppm for traceability, but that is many years old. In older datasheets Fluke also adds uncertainties algebraic. Is that changed due to the GUM in the last years?
I don't know, but since it gives better marketing numbers using RSS I guess all manufacturers use it for their more recent products.
If Fluke had simply stated their uncertainty in the datasheet, like most other manufacturers do (or used to do), then there would have no uncertainty. 
Could you explain what do you mean by that? They should remove the absolute specs?
The latter part was just a (poor) joke which should have read "... then there would have been no uncertainty". What I meant was that Fluke (and all manufacturers) should include in their datasheets their 10V uncertainty to traceable standards, ie. the 0.7ppm they use for calibrating these meters. That would eliminate the guessing and allow you to use the most appropriate method for calculating the absolute uncertainty for your purposes.
The Tcal +/-1C relative specs are the most important for understanding the meter's stability and I believe they should be provided for all high end meters - eg. you can use them to compare the drift of other instruments rather than the absolute errors (especially if you can control the temperature to +/-1 C). Fluke is very good in this respect and dissapointing that Keithley only provide 24hr relative specs for the DMM7510. Keysight presumably don't consider the 34470A a metrological instrument and point to the 3458A if you are that concerned with accuracy.
Absolute numbers are helpful of course but you can't necessarily calculate the relative figures from them, even if you know the cal standard uncertainty, as they don't tell you how they calculated the absolute numbers. For example, they could use a lower TC when calculating the Tcal +/- 5C absolute specs than the TC for the wider temperature range they specify in the datasheet. They might not do this of course but it could allow them to publish better numbers.
It still does't exuse them because the 365 day spec is not consistent with the 2 year spec. - subtracting 1.2ppm from the 2 year +/- 5C absolute figure (TC is .3ppm/C) gives 6.8ppm which implies an absolute 10V uncertainty of 4.1ppm RRS'd with 5.4ppm. That can't be right so either I've missed something else or it's another error.
I'm also confused by that. I also can't reproduce the exact values from the 8508A datasheet. My results are <0.5ppm lower.
It would be interesting to see how you calculated that.
What I can imagine is another (higher) calibration uncertainty if you order a 2year calibration.
Seems a bit of a stretch - I would expect a meter to be within the 2 year specifications after 2 years of ownership from new.
These are things one could probably discuss in Kassel with Fluke.
Right; it's unreasonable to criticse Fluke for specifications they haven't officially released yet. If I were spending $17k+ on a meter then I would certainly be talking to Fluke to resolve my uncertainties about the uncertainties in their specs!
I am unlikely to buy one but it is interesting (for me) to analyse the numbers anyway to help my understanding of how the specifications are derived and what they really mean.
I think in contrast to the 3458A specs, the 34470A specs are absolute specs (directly traceable). But I can't find any uncertainty calculations in the service manual. They only suggest calibration equipment. In the 34401A service manual they talk about at least 1:4 TUR imho.
I can have a look into the calibration sheet from Keysight for the 34470As. If I remember correct they are tested against 24h specs with an 5720A. But I will check that.
Is that standard for the 8508A or an extra cost option?
That was no option. I can imagine that they improved their uncertainties over the years and no one has changed the 8508A datasheet.
Ok, thanks. A bit surprising as marketing are generally very keen that any potential purchasers know about any improvements thay make.