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sermet
Hi everybody! This is my first post on the Cove. The Cove is great and it has been of much help in my work.
I am trying to assess the best measurement capability (BMC) of a small calibration laboratory in the dimensional area (calipers, micrometers, dial indicators). I would appreciate your comments on the following questions.
1. What is the exact meaning of the qualifier of “nearly ideal instrument” which is given in the definition of BMC? As in the document EA-4/02 “Expression of the Uncertainty of Measurement in Calibration” , “… inherent to the concept of being nearly ideal is thus that there should be no significant contribution to the uncertainty of measurement attributable to physical effects that can be ascribed to imperfections of the device to be calibrated. However it should be understood that such a device should be available…”
This is quite confusing to me.
Let’s consider for instance the uncertainty budget of a nearly ideal caliper. Shall I include contributions such as parallelism of the jaws? Or should I consider that contribution to be zero? Or should I estimate it based on the assumption that the nearly ideal caliper is within the tolerance values reported in a relevant standard? or should I rely on available information given by mayor producers? Or should I set up a method for determining the parallelism in the lab. and estimate the minimum value of the uncertainty of that method? (we don´t measure parallelism in our routine calibration of calipers)
We do measure the parallelism of the anvils in the case of a micrometer using an optical parallel. What is the parallelism contribution for the uncertainty budget of a nearly ideal micrometer? Should it be our minimum uncertainty value (say 1 red interference band) or the tolerance for parallelism reported by the standard (say 3 red bands)?
2. How should I estimate the type A uncertainty contribution for the BMC assessment? We do not have at hand any type A uncertainty studies on nearly ideal instruments or brand new calipers, micrometers, indicators, etc. Shall I look for repeatability values reported by the mayor producers? Does anyone know where could I find such data?
Thank you for your kind support.
I am trying to assess the best measurement capability (BMC) of a small calibration laboratory in the dimensional area (calipers, micrometers, dial indicators). I would appreciate your comments on the following questions.
1. What is the exact meaning of the qualifier of “nearly ideal instrument” which is given in the definition of BMC? As in the document EA-4/02 “Expression of the Uncertainty of Measurement in Calibration” , “… inherent to the concept of being nearly ideal is thus that there should be no significant contribution to the uncertainty of measurement attributable to physical effects that can be ascribed to imperfections of the device to be calibrated. However it should be understood that such a device should be available…”
This is quite confusing to me.
Let’s consider for instance the uncertainty budget of a nearly ideal caliper. Shall I include contributions such as parallelism of the jaws? Or should I consider that contribution to be zero? Or should I estimate it based on the assumption that the nearly ideal caliper is within the tolerance values reported in a relevant standard? or should I rely on available information given by mayor producers? Or should I set up a method for determining the parallelism in the lab. and estimate the minimum value of the uncertainty of that method? (we don´t measure parallelism in our routine calibration of calipers)
We do measure the parallelism of the anvils in the case of a micrometer using an optical parallel. What is the parallelism contribution for the uncertainty budget of a nearly ideal micrometer? Should it be our minimum uncertainty value (say 1 red interference band) or the tolerance for parallelism reported by the standard (say 3 red bands)?
2. How should I estimate the type A uncertainty contribution for the BMC assessment? We do not have at hand any type A uncertainty studies on nearly ideal instruments or brand new calipers, micrometers, indicators, etc. Shall I look for repeatability values reported by the mayor producers? Does anyone know where could I find such data?
Thank you for your kind support.
It is easy when explaned by you sir but then you can do this magic