Hi Everyone,
Great discussion! Maybe I can add a little. When I needed a NIST
traceable certification for a thermometer, I simply ordered such a
thermometer from a large scientific supply company (the kind of company
that has a catalogue the size of a thick book). It was certified for the
temperature that I wanted to be very accurate about. Then I used the
certified thermometer to calibrate the other thermometers in my
laboratory. My students were surprised to see the variation in
temperature readings that they got with our different thermometers!
Of course we had to warn our students that the traceably certified
thermometer was very precious, and it was not to be used for routine
temperature measurement. However even those warnings did not completely
prevent the problem of students using the thermometer as a stirring rod!
I don't know if the NIST calibrates users' thermometers, but I suspect
that they have a website and email address that can help you get an
answer.
Best wishes,
George Chang
UC Berkeley
> Hello seafood list, I'll take the chance that we are debating thermometers
> and their regulations and will continue the discussion:
>
> On page 161 of the "Fish and Fisheries Products Hazards & Control
> Guidance: Third Edition", it states:
> "When digital time/temperature data loggers, record thermometers, or high
> temperature alarms are used for in-plant monitoring, check for accuracy
> against a known accurate thermometer (NIST Traceable) at least once per
> day."
>
> Can someone elaborate a little more on that statement? I assume, the
> thermometer has to be sent out to get NIST traceable certification. If
> that's true, how often a firm needs to do so?
>
> Any comment is highly appreciated,
>
> Thanks!
>
> Amilcar Caputo,M.S.
> Fuji Food Products, Inc.
>
>
>
>
>
>
This archive was generated by hypermail 2b29 : Thu Jul 27 2006 - 10:29:00 PDT