Recently received a Gossen Starlite 2 light-meter. Amongst it's many functions, it can do Zone measurement a la Adams/Archer - which re-kindled my interest in that. Armed with the strange phrase "place in Zone such-and-such", I went outside and used the camera spot-meter to "place" a white van's hood into Zones V, VI and VII.
I took the Sekonic L-398 along also and shot per it's incident-light recommendation with no compensation.
At top left, we see illustrated the reflective-metering adage, the one about mid-gray.
At top right, +1 EV comp, i.e. placed in Zone VI gave quite a good exposure. At bottom left, placing in Zone VII blew some significant highlights.
At bottom right, the Sekonic provided the best "placement" betwixt Zones VI and VII.
The shots are statistically insignificant because I couldn't be bothered to take hundreds of shots and I don't have hundreds of light-meters either ...
... but the simple test seems to bear out the literature. Hopefully it is of passing interest to some folks here.
Meanwhile, I'll stick with my current methods and I'm not looking for advice on how to expose a shot - thanks anyway ...