The first question ask by users of AcuRite humidity monitor is how accurate is the reading of relative humididty (RH) especially when the spec for RH is +-4% due to unit to unit variation. (Obviously, the company would like to ship all units they made to make more money. Tighter spec causes high rejects and the company will make less money or the cost for the AcuRite will have to go up.) Also the accuracy could degrade over time due to contamination of the humidity detector. There is no way for users to find out if they have bought an accurate monitor or one that is 4% or more off unless they do a two point calibration at room temperature using two saturated (with some undissolved salt left at the bottom) salt solutions each sealed in a ziplock bag together with the monitor. This is very easy to do for anyone. Just put the AcuRite in the sealed bag overnight then check the RH reading the next morning and you are done. Fortunately, the needed salts are also easy to come by as one is table salt (sodium chloride; the monitor should read 75% RH at 70 deg F) and the other could be driveway ice melt (calcium chloride; the monitor should read 31.5% RH at 70 deg F). Since bacteria could not grow in such salty solution, the sealed saturated solutions could be saved and reused over and over again allowing re-calibration whenever the user desires. I used two ziplock bag, each of which has two plastic cups. In one of these bags, each cup has 1/8 inch of water on top of 1/8 inch of undissolved table salt. Likewise, in the other bag each cup has saturated driveway ice melt solution. The procedures I used to do a comprehensive calibration are given below. Using these two saturated solutions, my measurements on the AcuRite I bought showed that for temperature from 39 deg F to 79 deg F and for relative humidity from 29% to 75% , the max error is 3% off in humidity occurred at very low temperature (39 deg F) (i.e 37%RH is actually 40%) and near room temperature, the error is only 1%RH. (Lucky me!) Actually, the AcuRite is both a digital humidity monitor (hygrometer) and a digital thermometer. The AcuRite I tested is surprising accurate over a practical range of temperatures and a practical range of relative humidity values (see details given below). The temperature reading is also quite accurate. It is very desirable to have a high accuracy humidity monitor and thermometer for use at home. In the summer, a high humidity house is uncomfortable. Worse yet, a humid basement smells foul allowing mold to grow and humid closets cause clothes to smell bad - a nightmare for many housewives. Knowing accurately the humidity allows one to take measure to lower it. With seemingly high accuracy, the AcuRite is surprisingly cheap. The comfortable relative humidly(RH) range to human body is recommended to be a region around 45%. American Society of Heating, Refrigerating and Air-conditioning Engineers Inc. (ASHRAE) recommends: ---RH ---------temperature ---- season 30- 60%----- 68-75degF -------winter 30- 60%----- 73-79degF ------summer "Elevated relative humidity can promote the growth of mold, bacteria, and dust mites, which can aggravate allergies and asthma" and "Relative humidity levels above 70% may lead to the development of condensation on surfaces and within the interior of equipment and building structures. Left alone, these areas may develop mould and fungi." Typically, room temperature is set at 70degF. Also I preferred a RH of 50%. At 45%RH, I feel dry and my skin starts to wrinkle. Sodium Chloride saturated solution is commonly used to calibrate a hygrometer (humidity monitor) at room temperature (70 deg F) which should give 75%RH. Thus the hygrometer needs to be calibrated again with another source with lower RH, such as Calcium Chloride (31.5% RH at 70 deg F) or Magnesium Chloride (33%RH at 70 deg F). If the hygrometer agrees with one of these values then one can assume it is accurate around 50% RH. If the hygrometer is used only at room temperature, it only needs to be calibrated by two saturated solutions (for example sodium chloride and calcium chloride). However, I have calibrated from 39 to 79 deg F. Table salt (sodium chloride) and driveway ice melt (calcium chloride) provide an inexpensive and convenient way to calibrate (or check accuracy) of a hygrometer over a range of temperatures and humidity values. I have calibrated my AcuRite unit by using sodium chloride and calcium chloride saturated solutions, each of which was placed in a ziplock bag together with the AcuRite. An accurate hygrometer is expensive and bulky and I was surprised at the seemingly high humidity accuracy of the Acurite which I purchased from Amazon. The attractive features of the AcuRite are: seemingly very accurate humidity and temperature readings across a useful range of humidities and temperatures(see calibrations given below), records the max and min humidity and temperature occurred within 24 hr interval and low cost. Also the display font for humidity is large enough for convenient viewing. These features are not expected from a $10 device. Calibration using saturated table salt (sodium chloride) solution Calibration is based on published measurements of equilibrium relative humidity(RH) vs temperatures above saturated salt solution by scientist(s). I will use these published RH values as standard. For table salt saturated solution, the published RHs, given below, surprisingly are almost a constant from 32 to 104 degF(the measurement increment was 5 degC). Temp (deg F) RH(%) 32-59 76 68-104 75 I found that there was no different from using table salt with and without iodine. So I used the former. I also found that salt slurry did not work well. I sealed the AcuRite and two plastic cups in a ziplock bag which was further sealed by Scott tape. Each cup has at least 1/8 inch of undissolved salt (at the highest temperature of measurement) with at least 1/8 inch of water above it. Each deg F change can cause 3% change in RH. Since the AcuRite with battery is a big thermal mass, I made sure that for each measurement, the temperature and RH were stable for at least 1/2 hr, a condition which turned out to be most difficult to meet. Measurement results are given below. I found that for temperature, the AcuRite seems to be about 1 deg F higher than another temperature meter which has fractional deg F. However, I will use the temperature displayed by the AcuRite. Low temperature measurements were taken in a refrigerator. It took about one week to do all the measurements. Temp (deg F) RH(%, measured) RH(%, from standard) Error(%) 41 74 76 -2 72 75 75 0 75 77 75 +2 77 76 75 +1 88 77 75 +2 90 76 75 +1 From the above table, at room temperature of 72 deg, the error is zero and from 41 to 90 deg F, the max error is 2%RH. I would say this is quite acceptable for home use. Next, I checked if the humidity is linear over a range of RH values and a range of temperatures by using another saturated salt solution. Calibration using saturated calcium chloride (CaCl2) solution at low humidity A better and purer source for calibration at low humidly is magnesium chloride. Over its saturated solution, the RH is 33% over practical temperature range. Pure Magnesium Chloride is available from amazon or ebay sellers. Another good source to use is Potassium Carbonate which another reviewer in this forum had used and which is also available from amazon or ebay. The equilibrium RH is 43% from 0 to 30 degC. However, I didn't want to spend the money and trouble to get them. I found that I have some Prestone Driveway Heat ice melter (available from Home Depot and Lowes) which turned out to be Calcium Chloride. But the purity of the source was unknown and this would cast doubt on the results. From the internet, I found that the published equilibrium relative humidity(RH) vs temperatures above saturated calsium chloride solution are: Temp (deg F) 41 50 59 68 77 RH(%) 40.0. 38.0. 35.0. 32.0 29.5 RH vs temp