??? It comes standard at 10mV/'K and accuracy of +/- 1 degree.
If you want it more accurate than that you can calibrate it. For most temperature controllers etc +/- 1 degree is perfectly acceptable and it never needs calibrating.
NO! It does not come standard at 10mV/K and
and an accuracy of ±1 degree.
Just the 10mV/K is standard. The offset varies a lot.
So why does the OP want to measure the output voltage instead of calculating it according to your truth - which adds extra inaccuracy?
If you read the datasheet thoroughly you'll notice that the LM335 is accurate to ± 60mV (meaning ±6 degrees).
Reading posts only halfway and responding wrongly will create confusion!
Once again: The LM135A/235A have an offset of ±10mV of the standard value of 2.98V while the LM335 has an offset of ±60mV and the the LM335A still has one of ±30mV.
An accuracy of ±1 degree is not a measurement, but a rough estimate! Tests prove that humans consider a temperature change of 0.5deg/C either too hot or too cold!
When I posted the difference between LMxxx temperature sensors there was nothing personally involved in that.
You are trying to make it a personal discussion!
Watch it! I'm not in the mood to play or fool around!
Boncuk