by
lmh » Mon Feb 07, 2011 2:12 pm
Personally, I absolutely agree with all the replies from those referring to regulated work. Even if your work is purely non-regulated research samples, you're skating on thin ice if you start removing calibration points to make things fit.
In the non-regulated environment in which I work, there are only two situations where I would delete calibration points:
(1) from the ends of a calibration curve which clearly extended too far (I've hit the limits of the detector in either direction; happens during method development).
(2) in the middle of a curve, where something has gone materially wrong, with evidence from more than just a bad data-point, i.e. the autosampler squashed a vial or pushed a septum into a vial, and that particular standard would have evaporated or injected incorrectly. In this case I will use the remaining points provided they aren't too widely spaced; even here I would report the problem. So far in my career I've only had to do this once, I think...