In my teens I enjoyed chemistry as a hobby,
40+ years later I've just re-started less than a year ago,
and my first 'standard' was Sodium Carbonate.
Stated as 99.3% pure by the vendor.
The sodium Carbonate lost 0.56% weight on de-hydrating.
eBay scales, calibration weights, pH meter, and used volumetric flask and burette.
The pH meter is great if you leisurely want to draw a titration curve for one acid-base titration
(e.g. Sodium Carbonate + Sulphuric Acid)
but I found it so slow that I gave up cross-titrations (to check my errors).
I'll do my titrations again with Phenolphthalein or similar.
So, in my opinion, it's not too difficult to get results with less than 1% error
with a small investment in equipment that will be generally useful,
but for small-scale acid/base titrations (hobby, cheap) don't bother with a pH meter,
acid/base indicators are good enough I believe.
For daily qualitative chemistry,
it generally seems adequate to use the concentration and purity stated by the supplier
and dilute or use accordingly.
That's my impression so far, others more experienced may differ !
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