Kirk Keyes
Member
Hi Clarence -
I would just skip the battery replacement - but I ubderstand the desire to have instruments be completely operationally sound, even if it is just a battery...
I have a Noritsu DM-201 color densitometer and it is handy having a battery in it as it remembers the calibration points for the Vis, R, G, and B of the reflection and transmission cal points. It would be a bit of a pain to punch them in every time, but it would not be bad as I use the densitometer on a non-daily basis. I suspect the same could be said about your machine.
If I was using it on a daily/nearly daily basis, I would just leave it on and let it remember the cal levels while I was using it for that extended period. And I do recalibrate my instrument once a day when I use it. I did control chart the cal accuracy for the first 25 calibrations over a year's worth of time, and I found my Noritsu to be very accurate - usually not more than 0.02 drift over a period of several weeks.
Just make sure you give the machine several minutes of warmup time after it's been off.
Kirk
PS - did you get an emulsion made? I still need to buy some AgNO3 and get a stirrer/hotplate. And how did the wife take it when the giant cameras were unload from your car? Did you have to tie a cariboo up in the backyard to hide the camera from her?
I would just skip the battery replacement - but I ubderstand the desire to have instruments be completely operationally sound, even if it is just a battery...
I have a Noritsu DM-201 color densitometer and it is handy having a battery in it as it remembers the calibration points for the Vis, R, G, and B of the reflection and transmission cal points. It would be a bit of a pain to punch them in every time, but it would not be bad as I use the densitometer on a non-daily basis. I suspect the same could be said about your machine.
If I was using it on a daily/nearly daily basis, I would just leave it on and let it remember the cal levels while I was using it for that extended period. And I do recalibrate my instrument once a day when I use it. I did control chart the cal accuracy for the first 25 calibrations over a year's worth of time, and I found my Noritsu to be very accurate - usually not more than 0.02 drift over a period of several weeks.
Just make sure you give the machine several minutes of warmup time after it's been off.
Kirk
PS - did you get an emulsion made? I still need to buy some AgNO3 and get a stirrer/hotplate. And how did the wife take it when the giant cameras were unload from your car? Did you have to tie a cariboo up in the backyard to hide the camera from her?