by
lmh » Fri Dec 10, 2010 3:03 pm
LIke Tom, I suspect this is a matter of terminology, but I almost feel the terminology is the wrong way round (sorry Tom!).
To me, verification implies that no actual change is made, you just check that the instrument is giving the correct results.
Calibration implies that the instrument (or some internal calibration curve within it) is changed in some way to give the right result.
As such, when you do an automatic calibration, it is indeed a calibration. Results afterwards will not necessarily be the same as results before. When your certified meteorologist casts his cloud over your instrument, he/she may or may not actually change it in some way (in which case they are calibrating), but they do, in any case, produce a lot of statistical data verifying its performance. Because you don't do all the statistics from multiple weighings, your automatic calibration is not a verification (although I'd be deeply surprised if anything were going wrong).
But one can get too bogged down in terminology. The main thing is to have procedures in place so you know how the instrument is likely to have been performing on any particular day. If you don't run the automatic calibration routine as often as the manufacturer suggets, then the instrument may drift, and give the wrong answers. If you do, the results are only as good as the instrument's internal calibration mass, and the quality of its calibration routine (i.e. the results are probably the most reliable thing in your lab; analytical balances are pretty good!). If you're really fussy, you could buy yourself a high-quality (traceable?) mass to use to verify the automatic calibration after it's finished.
Incidentally, a personal soap-box theme of mine: I really like it when labs do their own verification in addition to, or instead of external metrologists. I really want to know that when I use my pipette in my lab, I get what I expect. That's a very different question to whether an expert from a calibration company can get the right result when he/she uses my pipette in his/her temperature-controlled super-environment. Frankly, it's bad science to assume that because something has been externally verified, it's also correct internally.