@bdunham7
But: When it wouldn´t make any affections, why can you make self-cals...
I don't have time for a long reply, but the short answer is that when your lab does a calibration, they are essentially verifying that the self-calibration process itself is working accurately. There's not much assurance that the scope would stay accurate for a year without self-cal. Unfortunately Siglent's manuals don't go into this as extensively as Tek does with their Signal Path Compensation, but not being allowed to do the self-cal between calibrations would be like insisting that you turn off autozero and not use ACAL on your 3458A.
Some Siglents have a 'Quick-Cal' feature that runs in the background but I don't see it on the SDS2000X+. Perhaps it is just there and there's no menu option to defeat it.
Anyway, unless you document and build your own calibration history, you have to combine the cal report with the
manufacturers specifications and instructions. And Siglent doesn't tell you not to run self-cal, just the opposite. IMO. Best of luck convincing anyone else.