I have five AD587 switch selected, powered by a wall wart.  They seem to be 
very good, but of course not in the league of the units discussed here.

In any case, they are 10V and all within about a millivolt.  If I average them 
I should get a statistically valid accuracy improvement, neglecting any 
systematic errors in their manufacture.


While watching the display on my HP 3456A I begin to realize that my need for 
'exact' voltage isn't really so great.  Certainly what I have is more accurate 
than anything I will ever really need.  But it's fun to see the variation and 
watch the drift and compare my other high class voltmeters.  The 3456A manual 
says to wait an hour for it to warm up and that seems reasonable; nearly all 
the drift is gone by about 45 minutes.

Bob




On Saturday, March 8, 2014 5:34 PM, Dallas Smith <[email protected]> wrote:
 
I'm in west Michigan, Holland. As far as accuracy the manual states  ±10ppm for 
30 day or ±30ppm per year for the 10v output .
I need it to calibrate my (modified with reference oven)  EDC (Electronic 
Development Corp.) model 520a. Which I calibrate my Fluke 510a with a Fluke 720 
voltage divider. I use the 510a to calibrate DB voltage for my audio test 
equipment. I also have a Fluke 8505, Fluke 8800 and Data Precision Model 2500.

So if I can achieve ±50ppm per year this would be sufficient, but better would 
be nice since they may not be calibrated every year.

I’m just a hobbies audio engineer that designs audiophile equipment and other 
interesting projects not related. So sending it to fluke is not economical for 
me.

Since Joe suspended  operations for his SVR-T with low cost calibration. I 
purchased one and put it in a 35°C oven and it seems to outperform the Fluke 
731b as compared to my 8505 for drift. I will have three 10 volt references in 
my lab to track uncertainty.

So are there any calibration labs that will calibrate my 731a and my home brew 
reference’s?




> Date: Sat, 8 Mar 2014 16:00:41 -0700
> From: [email protected]
> To: [email protected]
> Subject: Re: [volt-nuts] Economical Standard Calibration
> 
> Dallas,
> 
> How accurately do you need the 731B set?
> 
> Where are you located? I am in Flagstaff, Arizona
> 
> I have four 731s, and I know how to calibrate them.
> 
> I also have a 3458A and a Fluke 7001 that goes to Fluke for calibration soon. 
> I
> do not know the turnaround time.
> 
> Joe
> 
> 
> On 3/8/2014 3:13 PM, Dallas Smith wrote:
> > Good point, not a meter a Fluke 731b transfer standard. no access to local 
> > labs.
> > 
> > On 3/8/2014 4:54 PM, Dr. David Kirkby wrote:
> >> On 8 March 2014 21:44, Dallas Smith <[email protected]> wrote:
> >>> Hi nuts,
> >>> This is my first post. The knowledge from contributors is amazing.
> >>>
> >>> Was wondering where one could economically get our_voltage standards
> >>> calibrated_
> >>> to some traceable standard since Joe Gellar suspended operations for his
> >>> SVR-T?
> >>>
> >>> voltagestandard.com doesn't sell a 10v references and two of his 5v
> >>> Vref5-002 are costly.
> >>>
> >>> Dallas
> >> It would be worth stating what meter you have. Clearly what is going
> >> to be useful for a 3.5 digit meter, will not be for an 8.5 digit one.
> >>
> >> Dave
> >> _______________________________________________
> >
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