by
unmgvar » Thu Aug 18, 2005 11:02 am
I think that if you posses an analitical balance that can adjust itself and perform an internal calibration check to itself, then you do not need to perform an external check everyday as well.
our SOP's direct us to perform an external check once per month using E2 standard weight ranging from 10 mg, 100 mg, 1 g, 10 g, 100 g. the balance are check for both precision check (for exemple XX.XX mg and XX.X mg)
every 6 month we add a repeatability check for the lowest value.
every 6 month the balances are check by a technician to see if the internal adjustment and cheks works properly.
last year we had a small earthquake that was felt in the laboratory and we did check if there was any deviation to the standard weight. eventhou we found no deviaton, we still decided to readjusted and recalibrated the balances and then checked them to the standards just to be on the safe side.
Did we overeacted?
Could we have just done the internal adjustment and calibration?
on the balance side, I believe that we over did it, on the QA side,if an inspector had known of that earthquake, we covered ourself to the full extent.
i gave the exemple to emphises the point that from the all the posts the entire subject seems to be a lot in the eye of the beholder.
do we or do we not trust the automated functions of the balance for daily use?
fact remains that according to the FDA guidance, we do not need to externaly check daily the balances if an automated chek exists. we do however need to check the automated mechanism once in a while.
modern balances can perform automated adjustment to themselfs due to temp. deviation, and be more accurate then an external weight (that we would check only once per year)
what if the weights turn out to be out of spec?
do we cancel all the work done in the previous year?
do we start checking our standards weight for more then once per year?
I think that like we trust that the internal check of the UV detector or other critical instruments we can trust the internal adj. and calib. of our balances, especially if we have an FDA guidance to back us up.
apart from out of the ordanary days(like an earthquake, we do not need to overreact in our checks).
and there is yet to be found a good answer, to what do we do with all the work done between 2 OQ's with an instrument when the last OQ fails, that is different then just do more checks in smaller intervals