In a few weeks I might have the opportunity to calibrate my meters at my university cal lab. My Agilent 34970A has really good temperature stability but linearity (negative polarity) is mediocre.
I don't have a 3458A so, to check linearity, I reversed the output voltage at 1V intervals and compared my 6.5D meters (HP 6114A sourcing voltage). On the positive Vs negative test my Keithley 2790 has 7uV error (offsets already compensated) but the 34970A has 16uV error. By comparing the two meter for positive voltages (K2790 as reference) they seem to agree quite well, but for negative voltages the 34970A shows some error. The errror seems "linear" and easily compensable by changing the negative voltage gain.
On the service manual they says: "The –10 Vdc calibration electronically enhances the Internal DMM’s
a-to-d converter linearity characteristic. This adjustment should
ONLY be performed after servicing the A-to-D converter or
replacement of the calibration RAM." with "ONLY" in capital.
Can I overwrite the older linearity calibration or this would be useless / worsening?
Thankyou!