Unit 4 — Calibration Procedure and Calculations
TM-CAL-004 — Open Handout TM Chapters: Chapter 5, Appendix A ELOs: Execute calibration procedure; compute error and determine pass/fail Estimated time: 30 minutes
Step 1: Read the TM
Open TM-CAL-004. Read Chapter 5 and Appendix A completely.
Then come back here.
Chapter 5 — Calibration Procedure
CAUTION: Multipath reflections can shift the apparent carrier frequency by up to several hundred Hz in urban environments. Measure from a location with clear line-of-sight to the transmitter if possible.
5-1. PROCEDURE
- Identify local FM station; obtain assigned frequency from FCC database.
- Measure carrier center frequency with TinySA using MARKER PEAK function.
- Record: assigned frequency fassigned, measured frequency fmeas.
- Compute error: errorHz = fmeas − fassigned.
- Compute ppm: errorppm = errorHz / fassigned × 106.
- If TinySA reads fmeas = 98.102.4 kHz and assigned is 98.100.0 kHz, error = +2.4 kHz / 98.1 MHz = +24.5 ppm → TinySA internal reference is high.
- Repeat on 2 additional stations. Average the errors.
- Apply correction offset in TinySA reference calibration menu.
- Verify correction by re-measuring all stations: residual error should be <2 kHz on all.
Appendix A — Formulas
Carrier frequency error (Hz)
errorHz = fmeasured − fassigned
Error in ppm
errorppm = errorHz / fassigned × 106
Example: 98.1 MHz station, measured 98,102,400 Hz
error = +2400 Hz; errorppm = 2400 / 98,100,000 × 106 = +24.5 ppm
Key Formulas Summary
- errorHz = fmeasured − fassigned
- errorppm = errorHz / fassigned × 106
- error = +2400 Hz; errorppm = 2400 / 98,100,000 × 106 = +24.5 ppm
The Calibration Procedure
Chapter 5 specifies 9 calibration steps.
Calibration is a comparison: you apply a known reference value to the instrument under test and record what the instrument reads. The difference is the error. You then either: - Adjust the instrument until the error is within the acceptance criterion, or - Record the error as a correction factor to apply to future readings
An error criterion found in Chapter 5: 24.5 ppm. Confirm the exact criterion in the TM.
Practice Problems
Work these before checking answers.
P4-1. The reference value is 10.000 V. Your instrument reads 10.043 V. (a) What is the error in volts? (b) What is the error as a percentage of the reference value? Show your work.
P4-2. Using the formula for % error: error% = (measured − reference) / reference × 100 Apply it to: reference = 100.0 kHz, measured = 99,985 Hz. (a) Error in Hz. (b) Error in %. (c) Error in ppm.
P4-3. The acceptance criterion in the TM is ±1%. Your measurement gives an error of +0.8%. Does it pass? State your reasoning.
Practice Problem Answers
P4-1. (a) 10.043 − 10.000 = +0.043 V (b) 0.043 / 10.000 × 100 = +0.43%
P4-2. (a) 99,985 − 100,000 = −15 Hz (b) −15 / 100,000 × 100 = −0.015% (c) −15 / 100,000 × 1,000,000 = −150 ppm
P4-3. +0.8% is within ±1%. PASS. State: "error = +0.8%; criterion = ±1%; result = PASS." Always cite the TM section for the criterion.
Self-Check Questions
SC4-1. How many steps does Chapter 5 specify for the calibration procedure?
SC4-2. What reference value(s) does Chapter 5 apply to the instrument under test?
SC4-3. State the calibration acceptance criterion from the TM. Cite the section.
SC4-4. Write the error formula from Appendix A. Include units.
SC4-5. If the instrument reads 2.3% high, is the error positive or negative? What does a positive error indicate?
Answer Key
SC4-1. Count the numbered steps in Chapter 5. (TM Ch. 5)
SC4-2. See Chapter 5 for the reference values applied. These are the known-good inputs used to check the instrument. (TM §5-1)
SC4-3. See TM Chapter 5 or Chapter 7. Copy the criterion exactly with units and section number.
SC4-4. See Appendix A. Write it exactly as shown.
SC4-5. Positive (instrument reads higher than reference). A positive error means the instrument over-reads — it reports a value higher than the true value. (TM App. A)
Checkpoint
Before proceeding, you must be able to: - State the calibration acceptance criterion without looking - Write the error formula from memory - Work a % error and ppm calculation correctly
→ Proceed to Unit 5