Perhaps you should read the USA Cal Club Round 2 thread. That kit is pretty close to what you describe, though neither reference is 10 V. It's quite a lot of work to design and build a device to achieve 30 ppm uncertainties from 10 microvolts to 100 volts which is the basic DC spec for the Fluke 515A.
What you describe is useless for anything but DC. Using that to calibrate RF gear would take a lifetime of building instruments. And without a time reference, not even possible. The subject of "metrology" covers a lot more than the volt, ohm, ampere and temperature.
I'm not even remotely a volt or time nut. I'm concerned with practical calibration of a lab full of LCR meters, VNAs, spectrum analyzers, RF synthesizers, semiconductor testers, etc. That requires accurate volt and time references, but those alone are quite inadequate. It requires quite a lot more and it is vastly more difficult to get 100 ppm RF measurements than 10 ppm DC measurements. And in many instances national laboratories struggle to get 10,000 ppm uncertainties. Try to find a 0.1 dB step RF attenuator good from DC to 18 GHz. After all, at DC that's just a 0.25% accurate resistor ladder. I want one, but I'm still looking. They may not exist above 6 GHz at any price.
I started this thread to discuss aspects of speeding up circulation of the references among people and encompassing at least basic AC measurements up to RF. Primarily the latter.
Have Fun!
Reg
Understood. Your needs are probably different that most of the people in the Cal-Club I think. When I said "everything can be derived from that" I assumed everyone already knew "...with the proper equipment." A super-accurate GPSDO frequency standard can be purchased off of evilBay very cheap (and everyone should probably have one of these)-- so I did not include that. Thermal based AC and RF standards can be MADE, (again, if you have or are willing to build the right equipment, which includes an FRDC calibrator, etc.-- just like NIST does it). At the end of the day, you still need that DC standard to calibrate the AC thermal converter to. AC and DC current require an accurate shunt-- and you need the 10K standard to derive that (..."with the right equipment"). With a stable power supply and a 100:10:1 divider, you can derive all 5 cardinal points-- 1000V, 100V, 10V (from the standard), 1V, and 100mV. With these and a stable AC power supply, a set of thermal converters (that you can make yourself if you also make a FRDC calibrator)-- you can derive the 5 cardinal points for AC voltage-- and then on to AC current. I never said it would be easy, and I never said that you would not need to make or buy some equipment, but with those standards, you CAN derive everything needed. If you are willing to accept higher uncertainties for the standard for temperature, you can use an distilled-water ice bath and boiling distilled water (pressure corrected) to calibrate an NTC thermistor-- so the calibrated temperature probe is not needed in that case, then you only need the 10V and 10K standard.
Here's what I am assuming (and please correct me if I'm wrong)--- most of the people in the "Cal Club" are participating because they want to have an accurate volt and ohm in their lab (for DC and LF-AC work), without having to spend the money to have an accredited Cal-Lab provide that. So, it's kind of a "share the love" project-- one person provides the laboratory standards, get's them calibrated, and everyone shares from that. (OR-- No initial calibration nor bona fide lab standards are required, and everyone just compares each other's readings just for fun and entertainment). I don't think anyone in this club wants to buy or own a professional-grade calibration laboratory-- but building "hobby-grade" equipment appears to be (at least for some people) an interesting pastime. The more equipment you make or buy, the more calibration points you can generate (or measure). Different people will need different calibration equipment based on what they have and what they want to do.
For RF, building and calibrating the thermal converters is quite a bit more difficult, as a much more technical FRDC calibrator is needed-- but you can MAKE that if you are so inclined-- and you will STILL need the DC standard to calibrate THAT.
I have an idea-- why don't you design some home-brew RF calibration equipment, and post your designs in this forum? Obviously, the uncertainties will not be the same as a good calibration from Keysight, but for hobby purposes you CAN design something that is quite good!