josephn16
Chemical
- Sep 5, 2002
- 28
Hi all,
Here's my situation: I have to measure the density of a liquid in my process. The specification is 1525 g/L +/- 2.5 g/L. The instrument that I have been given to measure the density reads from 1500-1600 g/L, in increments of 2 g/L.
I do not feel that the instrument is the right one for this process due to the fact that the graduations are 40% of the total spec range. My biggest problem is that I need some very solid proof of this because both the spec and the instrument have been given to me by another of our plants that "invented" the process, and they do not listen to requests for change without some type of proof. Are there any tests that I can perform to prove my claim one way or another?
Here's my situation: I have to measure the density of a liquid in my process. The specification is 1525 g/L +/- 2.5 g/L. The instrument that I have been given to measure the density reads from 1500-1600 g/L, in increments of 2 g/L.
I do not feel that the instrument is the right one for this process due to the fact that the graduations are 40% of the total spec range. My biggest problem is that I need some very solid proof of this because both the spec and the instrument have been given to me by another of our plants that "invented" the process, and they do not listen to requests for change without some type of proof. Are there any tests that I can perform to prove my claim one way or another?