MassiveProng said:
A calibration house would NOT use a 0.03% DMM to calibrate your scope
with, you pathetic piece of shit!
Did I say they would? I said I would tweak it myself and that it would be
good enough. Stay on track, you're here to prove why it won't work.
What part of that proves that you are a brainless, pathetic piece of
shit do you not understand?
**** you. I read the thread. It doesn't matter who the author is,
and when it is you, you retarded ****, it becomes glaringly obvious
due to your total stupidity. Just like the "E-1 grade tech" remark.
You prove with your every post that it is you that is an incompetent
bastard.
Is that an apology? Where are your scematics and submissions?
**** you. It is you that lacks the basic understanding that errors
chain together.
Show one post where I demonstrated that I don't understand that. You can't.
The problem here is that you read something and then, in your twisted little
way, you interpret it as the poster is stupid and then you go off on some
totaly different train of thought. Like Don Quixote you then procede to
fight a battle against an illusion. You then begin to see every response as
though it's calling you a liar, even if they are just trying to put you back
on track. Many of your comments were valid, but they weren't germane to the
discussion at that point, just like the one you just made here.
You make it sound like the OP was going to cal some critical lab equipment
at home and that lives were at stake. Then you go on to tout calibrating
your home theater by using a DVD/CD. And that's fine for home theater, but
for lab quality work (like you constantly brag about, and compare everything
to) considering the use of a signal from a CD is just F*CKING STUPID!!! 1Hz
accuracy would be atrocious and you know that very well.
Now tell us why not? Exactly what kind of standard is required to adjust
a scope's vertical response to 3% as it's specs state? And why wouldn't a
..03% meter with traceable certs be good enough? I'm not saying it isn't,
since I never even visited a cal lab, much less worked in one. I just want
to hear your expert opinion on what is required.
You need to understand the concept of ACCEPTABLE ERROR, there is no
perfection only "good enough". What is "good enough" is in the eye of the
beholder, not yours.