A 2 point calibration would be moving your origin point up/down the Y axis a tiny bit. The risk is if you get o2 on the cells and then tell them that point (way too high) on the Y axis is "air". Then your whole slope is completely wacked. Really bad news.Could you please clarify linear deviation? Are you talking about:
1)points not on the expected "Slope" line with each end at the expected point
OR
2)one end of the slope starts on an expected point and it trends off the entire run?
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Very few units have a 2 point calibration because the juice isnt worth the squeeze for that normally tiny Y axis change (which is more or less just a change in atmospheric pressure for your calibration day/weather/altitude).