I also have the Harbor Freight IR unit, $19.95 as I recall and have determined it is accurate to within 1 degree at least. Couldn't you just point it at the liquid surface to determine temp?
I also have the Harbor Freight IR unit, $19.95 as I recall and have determined it is accurate to within 1 degree at least. Couldn't you just point it at the liquid surface to determine temp?
How did you confirm the accuracy of your unit?

I did it a couple of ways. One was against the house thermosat, the second using a therm. used to check temps of cooking items (electronic fork thing) which has a plug in probe and finally against a Davis weather station with a +/- one degree accuracy. Matched all three and figured that was good enough for me.![]()
You raised a couple of good points. First being my poor choice of words. Actually the Davis instrument claims accuracy 'within one degree.' All three displayed accuracy well within my humble needs.
Accuracy "within one degree" is just one aspect of thermometers.
What about consistency?
If the same temperature could read at 19 one day and 21 the next, accuracy is still within one degree, but consistency is poor.
On the other hand, a thermometer that constantly read three degrees high, but was constant, would be a very useful tool.
Incidentally, which degree? Within 1 degree C is 80% worse than within one degree F.
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