Challenge of the day

Sam Vimes

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Sep 7, 2020
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This is your coffee time challenge of the day. No resorting to the internet or those things I thiink are called books.

I've just aquired a Digital Inclinometer or posh electonic spirit level that actually gives you the angle. After gettng out my x500 microscope to read the instructions I discovered #1 was Calibrate your Digital Inclinometer.

Your challenge then is to tell how you would calibrate a Digital Inclinometer.

The irony is that in the 70s I was asked to design an Electronic Spirit Level. Which I did and was deployed in testing the high speed tilting trains but more often used on Drilling Platforms at sea when they were positioned and the legs wound down - sound familiar :)

Answers on a postcard as they say...... Good luck
 
Jun 16, 2020
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Sounds like drilling platforms work a bit like Buckman’s caravan. 😝

Is the calibration to achieve a level datum, or to set angles?

Traditionally, optical levels have been calibrated using a water level.

John
 
Jun 16, 2020
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When placing the unit on a flat surface, take a reading . Then rotate the unit so it is facing 180 ⁰ and take another reading. If there is no difference in the reading then the surface is level.
That will certainly check that the instrument is reading true. But not actually calibrate. Presumable then pressing zero on a known true surface calibrates.

John
 
Jun 16, 2020
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Google shows it priced between £12.69 and €164.

Perhaps this fits with Sam’s inflation topic. I was once (early 90’s) offered a £5000 laser level for £1000. , It was taken instead of payment. I refused as it did not have registration docs. Admittedly considerably better than the one in the OP though it did not do angles, but the price difference is enormous.



John
 

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