I think that KH Director adds acid until the pH of the sample drops to 4.5
Not sure why the suggested reference solutions should not work with it. GHL says that, when using their own dKH7.5 calibration solution you need to run the test at least three times in a row to get the proper results - maybe the reason for failure was insufficient number of tests?
I have fixanal vials for making 0.1N solutions for both sodium carbonate and bicarbonate. I have calculated that I need to take 14.3 ml of sodium carbonate 0.1N solution, or 28.6 ml of sodium bicarbonate 0.1N solution, and make up to 1 liter in a calibrated flask, to obtain 8 dKH standard solution. I believe that the second option would be better as inaccuracy of 0.1N solution sampling is 0.28 dKH/ml, whereas it is twice that much for sodium carbonate.
I am planning to make this solution and test my KH Director accuracy, I will report back when I run the tests. I am seeing up to 0.5 dKH variation in measured KH values during the day, which I think is a bit high - I suspect that inaccuracies might be caused by poor design of their dosing heads (rotation from the motor shaft is transferred to the rolleres solely by friction, and if there is accumulated dirt/grease between the rollers and the shaft, they slip), but would like to first try to calibrate the device with a proper alkalinity standard, before looking into anything else.