Doug,
I use the micrometer (or gauge) in the left hand and introduce the calliper (comparator) with my right, as I am not sinistral, and use my right hand for the delicate setting and feel of the calliper in the bore I am checking. To hole the mic in my right hand, would mean I was changing hands for the feel of the calliper in the "gauge". - Not good for repeatability.
As you are sinistral, I assume you use the bore gauge with your left hand, in both the bore and the micrometer. Not changing hands between bore and gauge is key to repeatability.
Irish quality control is "to be sure, to be sure" - but I Check-3-times, then put the tools down, and pick-up and check again. You quickly become accustomed to the operation and your measuring repeatability and accuracy stabilises quickly.
The major point here is that you do NOT adjust the micrometer onto the comparator (calliper or bore gauge, etc.) but set the micrometer and gauge the comparator with the fixed gap. That way you do not adjust the comparator during the check in the gauge. Screwing a mic onto a comparator will most certainly be risky for repeatability of your measurement, as that is a different contact loading to the feel you have when using the comparator in the bore, and likely to move the comparator.
I was taught by guys who machined parts for Rolls Royce Merlin engines during WW2... They were sticklers for precision and repeatability, as every engine was flown - and used to its extreme limits. Also, they had equipment that was about as accurate as most home workshops, not modern high precision CNC mass production with lazer and air gauging, temperature controlled clean measuring rooms, etc. I can only advise what I know to work for me... But many contributors have a lifetime of expertise to beat mine, so any other advice?
In the "home workshop" there are many gauges, some very high precision, like ball bearings, who's races have very precise bores and ODs - e.g. a 1" bore ball race makes a pretty good gauge for final finish checking of the comparator when making a 1" bore steam cylinder... I also use the shanks of milling cutters as "gauge standards" for ODs, and as gauges in small bores that need to be precise. (e.g. shaft bushes). I wonder, how often do many home workshop machinists check the accuracy of their micrometers and verniers? - Important when making thousands of parts, but maybe annually would be a good idea in the home workshop? - I usually do a "start of shift" check when I get a mic out of the box, and verniers get frequent zero checks. (I have mechanical verniers, not digital with "set zero" buttons. Too easy to measure something that has been inadvertently reset to a non-zero point!).
Enjoy!
K2