Calibration is the process of adjusting a weighing scale's response using known weights or a reference weight to ensure accurate weight measurements. Regular calibration by a certified technician is important for industrial weighing scales that are frequently loaded and unloaded to maintain reliability over time, even for advanced professional-grade scales.
Calibration is the process of adjusting a weighing scale's response using known weights or a reference weight to ensure accurate weight measurements. Regular calibration by a certified technician is important for industrial weighing scales that are frequently loaded and unloaded to maintain reliability over time, even for advanced professional-grade scales.
Calibration is the process of adjusting a weighing scale's response using known weights or a reference weight to ensure accurate weight measurements. Regular calibration by a certified technician is important for industrial weighing scales that are frequently loaded and unloaded to maintain reliability over time, even for advanced professional-grade scales.
Calibration is the process of adjusting a weighing scale's response using known weights or a reference weight to ensure accurate weight measurements. Regular calibration by a certified technician is important for industrial weighing scales that are frequently loaded and unloaded to maintain reliability over time, even for advanced professional-grade scales.
• Weighing scales are a part of diverse industrial functions.
Industrial weighing scales are repeatedly subjected to heavy loading and unloading.
• So, even if you own the most advanced professional-grade
weighing scale, regular maintenance and calibration will still be needed to improve scale’s reliability for weight measurement.
What is calibration?
• Calibration is a process by which a certified technician use known
weights or a reference weight to adjust weighing scale’s response, whether calibrating mechanical or electronic scales. Interesting, right? This is just a sneak preview of the full presentation. We hope you like it! To see the rest of it, just click here to view it in full on PowerShow.com. Then, if you’d like, you can also log in to PowerShow.com to download the entire presentation for free.