For me, calibration is about confidence, not certification. After reading the thread about actual Chinese voltage reference modules, I wouldn't have confidence in the reference. If I am going to spend $$$ on a reference it should be worth enough to justify a calibration.
That's called false confidence. I am not opposed, but without calibration, you don't know what you're looking at. You can monitor stability from a non-certified reference, and that's useful, but it doesn't tell you about the accuracy of what you're using the reference for.
I bought this ref as recommended by another member:
https://www.aliexpress.us/item/3256804431053626.htmlI've found it to be very stable, and if I am interested in more than monitoring drift, I'll pay for proper certification.
I have a couple other refs I bought from ali, and the worst thing about them was the fake calibration. They were all fairly stable. I think that purple one was the best, but it also got the most use, and that on time leads to stability if it's not a total POS.
I can't be the only one on the planet that has considered a DIY approach to a voltage reference using off the shelf parts. I am interested to hear the views of others.
You're certainly not. There are many threads dedicated to DIY refs, including this one:
https://www.eevblog.com/forum/testgear/elektor-voltage-current-calibrator-project/It's not a cheap project (build cost probably still above $500 per unit), and it should get calibrated too.
Whether you go the DIY route, or get a premade ref, they all need significant burn-in time for stability. Once they're stable, they're worthy of calibration.