No, you understand wrong. The problem with higher voltage won't be linear throughout EV levels, meaning that in low light conditions meter with 1.5V battery inside will show good exposure (if set properly for 1.35V), but in higher EV levels it will cause overexposure (even 2-3 stops). This circuit is very simple: battery - resistor (cds cell) - galvanometer (light meter with needle). There is probably variable resistor added next to light meter for linearity adjustment too. When light levels go up, CDS cell lowers it's resistance and causes voltage difference in battery source to have higher impact on meter reading. That's how I look at it. So, no Alkaline, no silver-oxide..
Anyway, see for yourself. Go out and point camera to area that will show 1/125s and f/4 with 100 ASA film speed. When you adjust shutter speed to 1/15s it should read f/11 and with 1/500s it should read f/2. With alkaline inside, it won't happen.
If you want to read further on this matter, here is very good source:
http://www.buhla.de/Foto/batt-adapt-US.pdf
What you need to do is get 675 hearing aid battery and adapter to place it inside PX625 compartment.
After you do that, you can check if variable resistor needs adjustment. This is the best solution, if accuracy is priority, which I believe should be.