Calibration of FLIR cameras is not normally an option made available to end users of their cameras unless working with a OEM core or a science camera. FLIR like to charge for calibration ! For cameras that FLIR permit user calibration, they detail the process in the supporting document set, as found for TAU when fine tuning the camera for different lenses.
For the cameras that I have worked on, calibration takes different forms that are dictated by the performance of the camera and manufacturers calibration routines. Some cameras only require a low and high temperature black body to align the Radiance to a temperature unit curve. This is called a “2 Point” calibration for obvious reasons and is adequate to align a Radiance to temperature conversion curve for non critical temperature measurement applications. Without that calibration present, the camera normally reports “Counts” that are a value of Radiance but not a temperature unit. The temperature that needs to be set on the black body calibration sources is detailed by the manufacturer in the calibration routine. In some cases it might be +10 Celsius and +120 Celsius but in other cases very different temperatures may be needed for high temperature ranges or manufacturers preferences. Some FLIR cameras, such as the SC4000, allow the user to set whatever sensible temperatures they desire on the Blackbodies for a particular temperature range, and then the user tells the calibration software the temperature that is in its field of view. This is great as it provides great freedom when it comes to the black bodies that may be used. Some are variable, whilst others can be fixed temperature or incapable of the temperatures specified by some manufacturers, such as 100 Celsius BB and a calibration routine needing 120 Celsius.
I know this does not answer your question but the requirements for calibration differ between FLIR models and FLIR advise of the required temperatures for setting the BB. The SC4000 calibration routine is comprehensive whilst a TAU calibration is quite simple. A science camera calibration routine will often permit the user to create many black body calibration points to correctly align the Radiance to Temperature conversion curve across a temperature range. The result is a very accurate temperature measurement capability. The multiple calibration points are stored in the camera and assigned to the range settings used at the time of calibration. Each range in a camera requires a set of calibration points. In the SC4000 and SC6000 there are many adjustments that may be made to the cameras configuration so a calibration run and associated calibration table is needed for each configuration. There are 4 factory calibration tables that are supposedly fixed (they aren’t) and 4 user calibration tables that may be changed at will. When connected to ResearchIR 4 MAX there are infinite calibration tables available and stored within the PC software that may then be uploaded to the camera at will.
I hope this helps a little.
Fraser