If you can convince the installers to leave the fuse holders open until the voltage check happen, I think you can avoid situations like this in the future. Once the fuse holder is closed, you are relying on someone taking a current measurement before opening the fuse holder. While that is a best practice on paper, it's an easy step to skip in the field. It not only requires a more specialized meter but also assumes everyone is always paying attention to what they are doing, which isn't the case on any job I've ever been on. You always have noobs who only know how to do the tasks you have trained them to do. Plus even the best and brightest get fried after a day in the sun. Seems better to design the workflow around that step, which I think you can do by keeping the fuse holders open, then closing them one at a time after the voltage tests.
Maybe there's an even better way. What are other people doing?
This.
Leaving fuseholders open (don't even leave fuses there) is absolutely crucial for safety to installers.
This is key for many reasons: including the fact that you may be at inverter, far away from Combiner Box, wiring it up or checking things and installer on roof closes the fuseholder.....
I don't know if larger commercial inverters or any residential ones still have GFI fuses, but removing them while installing will add a lot to installation safety also.