Great ideaI find I usually need to recalibrate my Trident a couple of times per reagent set, not sure what you mean by recent. If you have test kits you trust more, you can recalibrate to the values the test kits give you while leaving the Trident sample tube in the tank water.
You can also test the Trident calibration solution with your Alk test kit of choice to see if it comes out as expected and if you can rely on the test kit values, but it uses quite a bit of it up.
Do you just reuse the calibration fluid? Or calibrate against your tank water?I find I usually need to recalibrate my Trident a couple of times per reagent set, not sure what you mean by recent. If you have test kits you trust more, you can recalibrate to the values the test kits give you while leaving the Trident sample tube in the tank water.
You can also test the Trident calibration solution with your Alk test kit of choice to see if it comes out as expected and if you can rely on the test kit values, but it uses quite a bit of it up.
You can calibrate against your tank water if you trust your measurements from another source (Hanna, Aquaspin, etc). Calibration fluid has to be used within 8 hours of opening (supposedly; I'm sure the actual time is longer but not sure).Do you just reuse the calibration fluid? Or calibrate against your tank water?
I’ve done both. If you tightly seal the calibration fluid container after first use it stays accurate.Do you just reuse the calibration fluid? Or calibrate against your tank water?
If I had a consistent difference like that I’d be fine with mentally compensating for it, but for me it actively drifts. And not in any particularly predictable frequency, rate, or direction.I just accepted the 1.3 dkh and the 140ppm delta between my hanna's and the trident and use testing for trends.
I just stopped calibrating and testing with 2 things, no difference anymoreIf I had a consistent difference like that I’d be fine with mentally compensating for it, but for me it actively drifts. And not in any particularly predictable frequency, rate, or direction.
Your differentiation of the terms is scientifically correct but since there is no “perform normalization” checkbox in Apex but there is “perform calibration” I used the term that is there so as to not make it more confusing. From the Apex and Trident’s perspective it’s the same anyway.When you use readings from another device/tester, you are not calibrating. You are normalizing.
Test your other devices against a known solution. The calibration solution or a reference solution would work.