Sorry for the error in charge weight. It’s actually 39.92.
I’m trying to fix my outside wood boiler and my grandson decided to spread my sockets all over the yard. Lol. Its been a busy morning. I will reread the advice lil later, I have my hands full!
Recommendation for line conditioner?
No worries. Lets see if that is even necessary first.
Electrical Noise in the circuits typically causes a constant noise, or short term oscillation.
Null and gain issues are often due thermodynamics and can also be caused by software algorithms.
Without turning this into EE class, we are looking for null and gain stability, short and long term.
Things like linearity, bias, and uncertainty take more work. Lets keep this simple.
If you are game...
Lets do a run with about 30 samples of zero and a metallic test weight. The nickel idea was good for a test sample, or just use something close to your typical charge weight made of clean metal, and also the full scale cal weight you use to calibrate the scale.
With the null drift ON, see if the scale reads the calibration weight properly.
If not, calibrate the scale using the cal weight, then let the scale rest for a while with nothing on the platform.
After letting the scale rest, go ahead and zero the scale and weigh your pan, record that weight.
Then tare the scale so that the pan weight is the zero.
Note the rough time, the pan weight, and take five readings of the sample weight but also record if the null weight isn't zero, then tare the pan weight and proceed with a total of five samples. I will assume that if the zero doesn't repeat, you will write that down and tare before the next reading, so please note when/if you do this. otherwise I will assume you saw a zero with the pan.
After each five samples are checked, also grab the full scale cal weight value but make sure you have a zero.
Wait at least 30 minutes and repeat the five weight samples, note the time and any issues with a non-zero in the samples where the null required a re-zero, and the full scale weight value.
Do about 6 sessions over part of a day. If you have a thermometer, record the temp in the workshop. If you have an RH meter, record that too.
What this does for us is several things, but the main concept is to track the issues between null drift and gain drift with the auto-zero function turned on, and also tells us a little about the environment stability effects.
If you are game, take the data and we will try and read the tea leaves.