How to calibrate a thermometer?.

Flowki

Well-Known Member
Your first idea of using a meat thermometer and calibrate with the ice/boiling water method and using it as a reference would be my way to go. I bought a couple of meat probe thermometers and they seemed pretty accurate. But back to calibrating other thermometers using your reference, I would slap together a wooden box with a door and a hole to stick the reference probe through, seal the hole. Stick the thermometers in an wait. After a length of time (Depending how accurate you want it and your setup) take the readings and compare.

We used to have our students do labs calibrating with the boiling water/ice point method. On using the transfer method for the others using your 'reference' thermometer, I did many hundreds of calibrations this way.
I wasn't sure if the meat therm would be usable. I read a little saying that while it may be calibrated ok at the extreme ends it doesn't mean it's a linear scale across mid temp readings. It was enough to put me off although in hindsight I guess the possible inaccuracy is probably meaningless for my needs.

Never the less I went with the lab therm/closed box and a bovida pack/sealed tub. It put things in a decent enough range for me to feel quite certain. On the pluss side humidity at it's worse reading was about 7% out while temp calibration was within 5%F if I recall. Still, it's peace of mind that RH/temps are accurate enough that I can get a base line for vpd nutrient strength. I realised that without being certain of these aspects and only paying superficial attention to vpd I may have been running in circles with nutrient transition adjustments, particularly with N.

I would highly recommend people calibrate therm/humidity read outs when you can. During the process of doing all this I seen some horror comments of new hygrometers being way off, 10-15%. That will definately make a difference if you strugle with various issues like pm etc. All in it cost about £10 - $15 and 30min of putting things together. Some people seemed happy with trusting de-huey read out or an expensive RH read out and to be honest I think that's a big mistake. I've been in that same boat too, just trusting the units are correct out of the box, never dawned on me they are likely not.
 
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printer

Well-Known Member
The meat thermometer usually uses a thermistor as a temperature source, they are pretty linear. I have some cheap temp/humidity sensors and they (mine) are pretty accurate. But if the temperature reading is inaccurate it throws off the humidity readings as they depend on what the temperature is. I had access to some pretty good temperature and humidity instruments at work, I will probably have to check my instruments at some point again. Calibration was part of the field I worked in.
 
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