Yes, among other things.
Test the honey with a refractometer.
I have had some honey ferment this winter which was less than 19% according to my refractometer.
If I had honey at 16% I would keep it for show purposes.
I have had some honey ferment this winter which was less than 19% according to my refractometer.
I did calibrate my refractometer again against my olive oil test sample, but it done go fizzy.
2/ But Olive Oil is really poor for calibrating a refractometer (because different olive oils give a different reading).
The best you can hope for with it is to use a stored sample of the specific same oil to restore the instrument to its original settings. But that isn't "calibration".
The official answer would be that you're looking for UKAS accredited suppliers. Quick search turns up refractometershop.com which appears to be operated by Bellingham and Stanley. They supply to labs and food processors and the name rings a bell from years ago. Bad news is a glass test plate for the honey range is 99 quid plus postage plus VAT. Only you know if that counts as an arm and a leg....Anyone know where I can get some proper oil I will know the index of to calibrate properly (without buying gallons or spending an arm and a leg).
Anyone know where I can get some proper oil I will know the index of to calibrate properly (without buying gallons or spending an arm and a leg).
So they do; the small glycerol pack is listed on the UK site. Just the soft of item that they could do well, sourcing the specialist bits and pieces that no other UK beekeeping supplier sells. From the US you might hope for NIST certification but no mention of it; cheaper than any of the UK lab suppliers though.Mann Lake.