I stupidly adjusted the calibration on my thermometer when it was actually down to a faulty probe.
I'm now trying to re calibrate it myself and used boiling water as i know that it's 100c.
Is this going to work?
:confused:
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I stupidly adjusted the calibration on my thermometer when it was actually down to a faulty probe.
I'm now trying to re calibrate it myself and used boiling water as i know that it's 100c.
Is this going to work?
:confused:
I thought electronic tools had to be calibrated and taged by an aproved firm every 2 or 3 years?
Only if your customer demands it.
Some firms only check the calibration against accepable values then issue a pass or fail cert without attempting to carry out any adjustments.
Was told by someone at the RS calibration centre that they test all instruments using the same procedure & equipment, but charge extra just for supplying the result on a UKAS cert...
What are the temp. ranges of your electronic thermometer?,you just cannot calibrate by yourself if you have a wide temp. range like -50°C to 400°C, unless you have an acceptable temp. controller that is calibrated by an approved firm.
only if the customer requires it?
I would have thought any tradesman would want it correctly calibrated ?
if you say not , tell me what was I COMMENTING about? if you know, tell us all you seem to know everything,?
what is the probe type in your thermometer ? You can calibrate your RTD / Thermocouple indicators with calibrators.
We have within our clients one of the biggest calibration companies in the Benelux.
All the rooms are maintained within +/-0.2°C.
They calibrate temperature measuring devices in some sort of oil heated to 250°C and melting ice made of pure water.
If you have two points, then your device will perform very precise in the ranges we usually work, even with boiling water as the upper limit.