If you want to measure short circuit current, then a short circuit
is what to apply. Practically, I'd use a high wattage 0.1 or 0.01
ohm resistor and measure voltage across it - meter internal
resistance and leads altogether may be too high a resistance
to get you into short circuit current limit territory, and this
resistance is liable to be nonrepeatable across teardown and
even simple bench jostling.
But you may also care about the load-point where you fall
out of spec regulation. Here you need lesser currents and
a finer grained step size to map it out. I've made banks of
switched wirewound resistors for this using 1 and 0.5 ohm
values, series and parallel, letting me get below 0.1 ohms
and step size even smaller. Not linear, not pretty, but a
way to get data on a dollar-limited bench.
Don't care much for E-loads in power supply testing, the
active ones seem to want to fight with the control loop
stability-wise.