Chris S
Legendary Member
- Location
- Birmingham
Use the ones at the Post Office. They weigh things to 1/100 of a gram.1) I don't have very accurate scales.
Use the ones at the Post Office. They weigh things to 1/100 of a gram.1) I don't have very accurate scales.
I doubt it. Not even my local cocaine dealer goes down to that resolution.Use the ones at the Post Office. They weigh things to 1/100 of a gram.
The figures before the decimal point are grams and there are at least two digits after it.I doubt it. Not even my local cocaine dealer goes down to that resolution.
You are just stating your case using a different format. I still doubt it.The figures before the decimal point are grams and there are at least two digits after it.
I shall do that on my next visit, but I don't doubt the veracity of your statement. I doubt the scale's ability to go down to that resolution in a meaningful way. Measurement at that resolution, at 10-5 of a kg or meter is specialist stuff. You don't do it on an open pan scale or by using a ruler of sorts. The scale will have to be enclosed so that breezes and dust doesn't affect it, it will have to be cushioned to prevent building vibration to frustrate you and, even then, you'll have to continuously re-calibrate it with known weights which can never be touched by hand.Take a look in your local Post Office.
And how does that change things?It's an electronic scale.
Read this before replying.It's an electronic scale.
No they are not.They're more accurate than mechanical ones.
Just out of interest - was it a digital one with at least two decimal places?Just to clear things up. I did actually weigh the ring on the post office scales beforehand. It was light.
No, it looked like a see-saw with weights at one end.Just out of interest - was it a digital one with at least two decimal places?