Probably a better check would be temperature easpe. Since that is where everything in a discussion like this is going anyway. AC, DC, frequency, duty cycle, ambient, and the specific current all affect where the contact temperature and hence life of the contacts and the contactor itself are going. To worry about just the contact resistance is myoptic to the whole picture. Using a simple cheap IR heat gun would let you or any service guy determine if the "whole system" is being pushed or not, quickly.
As an example a contact that has a 'relatively' hih resistance may last forever if itonly has a small current running through it. The same contact might fail in a week if instead a large ocurrent is running through it.
Good'ol I*squared*R.