[time-nuts] V standards

Mark Sims holrum at hotmail.com
Thu Dec 11 20:15:56 UTC 2008


Most of the industrial scales that allow location to be specified do it to improve out-of-the-crate accuracy where you might not have a calibration weight/cart/truck available (BTW,  calibration carts are not  used on the more accurate scales...  things like bouyancy of the air in the tires can greatly affect the apparent mass).  Most lab scales way to accurate to be able to effectively use a gravity model.  They have built in calibration weights (or use external weights) that compensate for such things.     
I have not tried to see if I can see the tidal effect with my Mettler mass comparator (1 part in 100,000,000 res).  I would suspect that it would be swamped by temperature fluctuations and the HUGE effect of air density (the weigh chambers on these beasties lies behind three layers of thermal glass to keep radiation of body heat, etc from stirring up air currents).  At that  level of resolution you are recalibrating the scale pretty much between evey reading.  
-----------------------------------------------------------------Mark,

That's very cool that they would model static gravity effects like
that. Makes sense at that level of resolution.

Do you know of any laboratory scales that also require you
to enter the date/time so they can also model the dynamic
0.1 ppm effect on gravity of lunar/solar tides?

/tvb


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