RedVette
Automotive
- Apr 19, 2011
- 22
Hey, guys.
Would any of you happen to know what the accuracy tolerance is with modern XRF alloy scanners? Does it vary by brand? I read a brochure from Niton outlying their advances in the past century--heightened sophistication allowing a wider range of data processing, but it doesn't talk about the accuracy range. Is the margin of error a constant percentage of the yield value, or is it a consistent +/- decimal of a percent?
Assuming that the surfaces are fully clean and prepped, what could be the expected error margin if a scan by a modern Niton yielded--for example--an iron content of 0.25% in an L605 alloy?
Thanks in advance.
Would any of you happen to know what the accuracy tolerance is with modern XRF alloy scanners? Does it vary by brand? I read a brochure from Niton outlying their advances in the past century--heightened sophistication allowing a wider range of data processing, but it doesn't talk about the accuracy range. Is the margin of error a constant percentage of the yield value, or is it a consistent +/- decimal of a percent?
Assuming that the surfaces are fully clean and prepped, what could be the expected error margin if a scan by a modern Niton yielded--for example--an iron content of 0.25% in an L605 alloy?
Thanks in advance.