You still do not understand my statement! From the J-STD-001F
"A-2 BENCHTOP AND HAND SOLDERING SYSTEMS"
Selection criteria of benchtop and hand soldering systems include:
a. Soldering systems are selected for their capacity to heat the connection area rapidly and maintain sufficient soldering temperature
range at the connection throughout the soldering operation
b. Equipment should be able to maintain control within ±10°C [+18°F] of the selected or required temperature during multiple point-to-points or thermal mass on demand soldering operations to verify temperature stability.
c. Temperature stability-degradation to peak [set] recovery temperature – should be periodically checked to demonstrate soldering device can provide temperature control limits defined in Section (b) for multiple load, point-to-points soldering [for example; soldering of a multi-leaded component (s)] or depending on thermal mass demand soldering.
Note: Frequency of verification of temperature stability should be dictated by objective evidence of compliance to Section
(b).
d. Temperature stability-degradation to recovery overshoot - should be checked using point to point or on thermal mass demand soldering and shall not exceed the limits defined in section (b).
The range of control mentioned it's for stability of the temperature overshoot BETWEEN point to point or high thermal mass loads, not during the soldering process itself in determinate point. First point explain exactly this by specifying that the solder system need to maintain "sufficient soldering temperature throughout the soldering operation".
The did not talk about any range during the solder of some point, only specify which range need to maintain between different soldering points when the tip recover at air and applies to the next point. IPC talks about stability across different points and that be accomplish with all good brand solder stations, even the old ones with a rudimentary but reliable analog control of the tip. My principal concern with clones if this point it's or not assured, with good and proved brands I haven't any concern.
NEVER IPC did talk about the accuracy of the temperature that the solder station was set. They did said "selected or required temperature" and not specify any range within the temperature that say at the "screen" and actually have at the tip.
As I mention in previous posts it's irrelevant if you set the temperature at 330 degrees and the station actually stay at 300 or 290 in air and drops 260 during soldering. The norm says that the important it's that when recover from soldering at a point to soldering to the next point it need will adjust it between +-10 degrees from previous state to garantieses the stability of all the points soldered in the process.
Off course you need to calibrate with an external certified device (with removable sensor or thermal image) that the showed temperature at display be most near possible to the actual temperature at the tip but a stable difference between the seted temperature and real temperature will not invalide the norm accomplish.
When sensor (TC) at thermal element in the point getting old the temperature measured shift no matter of which advanced method hast the station to measure it or how many bits use to measured it. When the iron tip it's new off course that the measured value it's according the desired value within a small range, when it get old not. It's a physic fact about TC and you need to recalibrate they frequently even with the most accurate sensor is used.
While it's a fact that you need to re calibrate the measured value against the aged TC or change the tip periodically if you prefer to be confident in the internal measure system of the station, a gap between the actual temperature and the supposed temperature not affect the final result. Metcal it's based in a physics phenom of material not in a TC , but still changes that did originated in the thermal cycling in the material alter the final temperature (less than in a TC) , but consistently maintain the limits at max temperature or overshoot. This it's the relevant point in all stations, that they assure that the temperature never will be highest that a max set.
All good solder stations garantieses the overshoot and range of stability in air off the PCB, but never garantieses that the absolute temperature set would be the "exactly the same" between different tips or through their aging process and that it's ok with the norm. Also, if you take in consideration that the temperature considerably drops at soldering process, it's irrelevant if the set point differ with the actual value at tip point meanwhile it be stable and capable of do the job.
The IPC norm simply specify this, you need to guarantee the stability of soldering temperature at air in similar points, but you able to set ANY temperature that you considere necessary to do the job. In the other norms they specify that the core temperature at component never be highest that specified to a reflow process but even that, they still not determines which exactly will be the set temperature at solder station to accomplish with a correct melted and soldering process. If you prefer set you station to 300 degrees it's correct and if somebody set it to 330 because the real temperature at the tip it's 300 is still ok. Good solder stations garantieses stability, soldering temperature it's a matter of user necessities and it's irrelevant the accuracy that you have to measured it, only matters good stability and good soldering process. And this it's according with the IPC norm.