I use a fluke 289 for all my voltage metering issues. im not trying to test the thermocouples accuracy, i'm trying to test the controllers calibration. I dont think I follow how your advice helps me.
Secton 4.2 of my citation shows how to calibrate a meter that measures a thermocouple voltage, using a voltage source and ice-point junction.
It is NOT a method to calibrate the thermocouple itself.
I used that procedure to calibrate a thermocouple meter without needing a variable temperature, using a measured voltage into the circuit (copper wires) and inserting the thermocouple wires into the meter.
I started with a commercial thermocouple (with appropriate connector), cutting the junction and using the two dissimilar wires in the circuit shown in section 4.2.
It's a nuisance to develop a known temperature of 1000
o C on the bench, but a type J thermocouple in the circuit I cited needs 57.953 mV from the external voltage supply (measured on a normal voltmeter) to give the same results in the thermocouple meter.
I assume the expensive calibrators do essentially the same thing, although they do not use frozen distilled water for the ice-point junction.
Tables of thermocouple emfs for different metal combinations are readily available, e.g.
https://www.thermocoupleinfo.com/thermocouple-reference-tables.htm and "Rubber Bibles" (
Handbook of Chemistry and Physics, formerly published by the Chemical Rubber Company, now CRC)
https://hbcp.chemnetbase.com/faces/contents/ContentsSearch.xhtml;jsessionid=8E86BDA9072F1211BDD5A2DAF5F3F562