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I have a Kewtech KT63 which I picked up a couple of years ago for testing stuff in the shed.
It has just run out of calibration and I'm not sure whether to contact Kewtech and ask them who to calibrate it or what?

I know on Ebay people are calibrating but you have to package it up and send it away, but my mate who works in Edmunson's, Leighton Buzzard (who I popped in and saw earlier) has just given me this flyer, he also mentioned that if it wasn't ready the same day and I needed to pick it up Friday, then they have a free burger van and drinks.

What he doesn't know is I can eat at least 25 quid's worth of bacon rolls, let alone free coffee! 😂




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Why does it need calibrating ? £60 I think is still expensive when these guys do a Daily special offer . If its not been used for site testing etc then why a 63?
 
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I'm not a fan of while you wait / on the day calibration events as the meter isn't calibrated under the same verifiable environmental conditions as it would if you took it to a calibration company who usually leave it to aclimatise in their calibration lab for 24 hours before calibration
 
I'm not a fan of while you wait / on the day calibration events as the meter isn't calibrated under the same verifiable environmental conditions as it would if you took it to a calibration company who usually leave it to aclimatise in their calibration lab for 24 hours before calibration
THis.....Its like a "drive by EICR" .Its another business that is not really regulated well
 
What qualifications are required to "calibrate " and what would the start up cost be to buy the right gear etc ?
 
What qualifications are required to "calibrate " and what would the start up cost be to buy the right gear etc ?
Not sure about qualifications, but Time Electronics make all sorts of precision standards and cal kits. This one is about £5k and does MFT:

Of course you need to have the cal kit calibrated by someone with even better equipment...all the way to the NPL or similar!

I have a couple of Time products, including their 1068 resistor standard (0.01% to 0.1% depending on value) and 1044 DC voltage/current calibrator (0.05%) but after work changes they have not been back for factory/standards lab cal.
 
I've had positive experiences with Paul Hanlon and thr team at Calibration Centre
 
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Anyone know if such "calibrate in on the day" cal services run in Scotland?
 
If you look at some of the big wholesalers sites they have quite often have a branch events section, there might be one near you running one
The only other option may be to ask at local wholesaler branches if enough people ask they may run one
 
If you look at some of the big wholesalers sites they have quite often have a branch events section, there might be one near you running one
That seems to get nowhere, for example, I can't find the OP's event mentioned on the Edmundson site!

The only other option may be to ask at local wholesaler branches if enough people ask they may run one
That might be worth a try. I know there are some cal places around Glasgow but usually you have to send them and with for return. That I can live with, just don't have original boxes to post safely any more!
 
CEF and others have a calibration day every now and then.
Due to my location they usually pick it up on one delivery day and return it the next.
I'm about 120 miles from my nearest wholesaler so popping in isn't really an option.

Probably better just to phone the usual suspects where you are and find out when their calibration days are.
 
CEF and others have a calibration day every now and then.
Due to my location they usually pick it up on one delivery day and return it the next.
I'm about 120 miles from my nearest wholesaler so popping in isn't really an option.

Probably better just to phone the usual suspects where you are and find out when their calibration days are.
I checked with the Dundee branch of CEF and they are doing a day on the 10th May so will take my MFT along, maybe my Megger IR tester and I think somewhere we have a PAT tester that ought to be checked as well.
 
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If you look at some of the big wholesalers sites they have quite often have a branch events section, there might be one near you running one
The only other option may be to ask at local wholesaler branches if enough people ask they may run one
Hit up yellow pages; you may find some that will come to you.
 
That seems to get nowhere, for example, I can't find the OP's event mentioned on the Edmundson site!
I think it's to do with management. The management in a lot of these kind of places (Builders merchants/plumbing/electrical/tiling/decorating chains etc, etc) don't have that critical edge thinking.
They couldn't care less if you brought something or not. They're on fixed wage with bonuses attached but they have to work there butt off to reach that level.

Yet, the whole game isn't just about money.

I've only met one manager in my life that has shown a way of thinking which makes you feel part of the bigger picture, and he's running the branch I posted about!

Let's face it, you're better off having friendly customers than ----ed off ones, unless you couldn't care 2 hoots about the company you're working for, then I guess you go for the latter approach.
 
Anyone know if such "calibrate in on the day" cal services run in Scotland?
CEF usualy have a summer and winter day in branch drop off in the morning and have it back that night
 
Dropped off our MFT & PAT testers at the Dundee CEF on Monday, collected after calibration yesterday afternoon. Quite convenient and good value at £25+VAT each.
 
Thats super cheap
I was surprised, maybe CEF subsidize it? Maybe they just get enough in one go to make the day pay well enough?
 
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for those costs , to collect . test then return .something is wrong ......
I think they come to the CEF branch and sit down to process all that have been handed in. So one trip for the tester(s) and probably 20 odd items to do.
 
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I think they come to the CEF branch and sit down to process all that have been handed in. So one trip for the tester(s) and probably 20 odd items to do.
Not a Huge amount ...Especially if CEF want a fee etc
 
Not a Huge amount ...Especially if CEF want a fee etc

I reckon CEF probably waive any fee because they will probably sell more stuff when all the people come in for cheap calibration.
 
I reckon CEF probably waive any fee because they will probably sell more stuff when all the people come in for cheap calibration.
LOL - you are assuming they have it in stock!
 
I think they come to the CEF branch and sit down to process all that have been handed in. So one trip for the tester(s) and probably 20 odd items to do.
They do more like 80-100 in my local branch on the CEF day. All at £30 a pop. Work it out…
 
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Never trust these calibration days. I have said before we sent some in and mixed in by accident was an analogue insulation continuity tester which just read open continuity all the time. Came back with a calibration certificate so i tried it, still open continuity even with various leads.
 
Never trust these calibration days. I have said before we sent some in and mixed in by accident was an analogue insulation continuity tester which just read open continuity all the time. Came back with a calibration certificate so i tried it, still open continuity even with various leads.
Exactly .... its a "Drive by calibration" service .
 
Two I think. It’s a good earner for them
 
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I use a CalCard, keeping a record of last and current readings gives me what I need to know.
 
I use a CalCard, keeping a record of last and current readings gives me what I need to know.

I use a check box in a similar way. Good to use inbetween 'proper' calibrations. Covers resistance and IR, but obviously not RCD trip times and levels.
 
Covers resistance and IR, but obviously not RCD trip times and levels.
That is the aspect of my MFT I can't check myself. The closest I can do is test one of my home sockets to see it has not changed much which, while better than nothing, is not quite enough to be sure.

I have a CalCard and really would recommend it as a handy way to check the low/high R ranges. I also have other meters that can be used to verify AC volts but the Zs & RCD stuff then I only have the one MFT.
 
That is the aspect of my MFT I can't check myself. The closest I can do is test one of my home sockets to see it has not changed much which, while better than nothing, is not quite enough to be sure.

I have a CalCard and really would recommend it as a handy way to check the low/high R ranges. I also have other meters that can be used to verify AC volts but the Zs & RCD stuff then I only have the one MFT.

The Metrel Eurocheck checkbox is very good as it does RCD and Zs tests as well as the IR/resistance checks. But I've just checked the current price is nearly £350.
 
The Metrel Eurocheck checkbox is very good as it does RCD and Zs tests as well as the IR/resistance checks. But I've just checked the current price is nearly £350.
Interesting to see, a lot cheaper than the usual cal systems (they are £5k-15k I believe) but not quite enough for a single MFT, given the cal box needs cal'd as well!

If you were in a small company though it would make financial sense so 5 or so MFT could be regularly checked against it, and once a year the cal box sent out for a full check.
 
Interesting to see, a lot cheaper than the usual cal systems (they are £5k-15k I believe) but not quite enough for a single MFT, given the cal box needs cal'd as well!

If you were in a small company though it would make financial sense so 5 or so MFT could be regularly checked against it, and once a year the cal box sent out for a full check.

Exactly my thoughts. If it was under £200 I'd say everybody should have one.
 
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For general info, it is Automated Calibration Services who do the CEF cal day work:
The certificates I received says they use this bit of test kit (at least for MFT/PAT use I think):
I don't see a UK price but a USA site is saying "Starting at $13,800.00" so around £11.3k
Others I see mentioned are more affordable (for a given definition of "affordable") such as this one:
Is it currently on sale at £4,209+VAT from here:
It looks less flash, so maybe less automation so not as good for quick turn-around use.

Another one I see mentioned around is this, though it is not claiming to be MFT style calibration:
Again, only a USA site coming up with a price on a quick search and they are saying it is usually sold at $22,822 so around £18.6k
 
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I use a CalCard, keeping a record of last and current readings gives me what I need to know.
Didn't mention that I test RCD/RCBO's in my own home on the same socket each time, and take a note of times etc and check against last readings, but then I am retried, and only do very small works for family and friends, in fact none this year yet.
 
For general info, it is Automated Calibration Services who do the CEF cal day work:
The certificates I received says they use this bit of test kit (at least for MFT/PAT use I think):
I don't see a UK price but a USA site is saying "Starting at $13,800.00" so around £11.3k
Others I see mentioned are more affordable (for a given definition of "affordable") such as this one:
Is it currently on sale at £4,209+VAT from here:
It looks less flash, so maybe less automation so not as good for quick turn-around use.

Another one I see mentioned around is this, though it is not claiming to be MFT style calibration:
Again, only a USA site coming up with a price on a quick search and they are saying it is usually sold at $22,822 so around £18.6k
Someone mentioned "Time" offer ex demo /used once/ maybe the packaging is bashed offers to boost sales .... :-)
 
What is the expected time for a MFT calibration ? is it 10 mins? 20 mins etc ????
I have no idea.

Based on my new certificate, it has 24 measurements so at 30s per test that is 12 minutes. Which is realistic but assumes the operator is familiar with that type of MFT, etc.

But I don't know if MFT have a secret test connector that would allow an automated stepping throgugh the tests and recording of results. That might take it below 5 min per instrument.
 
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These calibration days I would guess as long as it takes to print off the Certificate and put some tamper stickers on it.
 

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If you're a qualified, trainee, or retired electrician - Which country is it that your work will be / is / was aimed at?
United Kingdom
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Electrical Enthusiast (Unqualified Hobbyist etc)

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A Calibrated Question (Multi Meters)
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