Introduction; What Is Calibration; Why Should You Verify; How Often Should You Verify - National Instruments NI 6601 Manual

Calibration procedure
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Introduction

What Is Calibration?

Why Should You Verify?

How Often Should You Verify?

Software and Documentation

NI 6601/6602 Calibration Procedure
Calibration consists of verifying the measurement accuracy of a device and
adjusting for any measurement error. For the NI 6601/6602, calibration is
simply verifying the measurement accuracy of the crystal oscillator on the
device because the crystal oscillator is not user-adjustable. Verification is
measuring the performance of a device and comparing these measurements
to the factory specifications. If the device fails after calibration, return it to
NI for repair or replacement. For more information about how to contact NI
for repair or replacement, refer to the Technical Support Information
document.
The accuracy of timing components drifts with time and temperature,
which can affect measurement accuracy. Verification determines whether
the device still meets NI standards.
Calibrate the NI 6601/6602 at a regular interval as defined by the
measurement accuracy requirements of your application. NI recommends
that you perform a complete calibration at least once every year. You can
shorten this interval based on the accuracy requirements of your
application.
You will need the following software and documentation to verify the
NI 6601/6602. You can find these resources on the NI Web site at
Traditional NI-DAQ (Legacy) 7.4.4
Traditional NI-DAQ (Legacy) C Function Reference Help file
Traditional NI-DAQ User Manual document
2
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ni.com
ni.com

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