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kalibrierten

Kalibrierten is a German term rooted in kalibrieren, meaning to adjust a measuring instrument to a defined standard. In standard usage, kalibrieren is the verb, kalibriert the past participle, and kalibrierten may appear as a nominalized form referring to calibrated items. However, the more common phrasing in technical German is kalibrierte Geräte or kalibriertes Messmittel.

In practice, calibration is the process of comparing an instrument’s readings with a reference standard of

Calibration is essential for traceability, quality control, and regulatory compliance. It supports confidence in measurement results

Typical elements of a calibration workflow include selecting an appropriate reference standard, maintaining controlled conditions, conducting

Notes: Calibration is related to, but distinct from, certification and verification. It does not guarantee perfect

known
value
and
making
adjustments
to
align
the
instrument
with
that
standard.
The
result
is
a
calibration
that
documents
the
instrument’s
measurement
uncertainty
and
often
includes
a
calibration
certificate.
The
certificate
records
the
reference,
the
applied
adjustments
(if
any),
the
environmental
conditions,
the
date,
and
the
recalibration
interval.
across
industries
such
as
manufacturing,
laboratories,
healthcare,
and
research.
Standards
bodies
provide
frameworks
for
calibration
management,
with
ISO/IEC
17025
and
ISO
9001
being
commonly
referenced
in
laboratories
and
quality
systems.
measurements,
performing
data
analysis,
applying
adjustments
if
required,
documenting
results,
labeling
calibrated
instruments,
and
setting
an
interval
for
recalibration.
accuracy
indefinitely;
devices
drift
over
time
and
require
periodic
recalibration
to
maintain
stated
performance.
See
also
calibration
certificate,
traceability,
measurement
uncertainty,
and
metrology.