Just got the same exact scale only for 300 grams (stumbled upon this video by accident , awesome how I'm already subscribed)- anyhow, if the weight is inaccurate, you will need to re-calibrate it (should be in the instructions) - this is different from the "tare" function
Interesting. When I was shopping for that type of scale I thought the X0.1g written on it means that it only shows one decimal place, so I got one that had X0.01g written on it. But apparently it always shows two decimal places. I guess that only means how accurate it is, not how many decimal places it shows on the screen. Oh well.
You can't tare weight a scale while holding it in the air like that. And I'm sorry, I don't mean to nitpick but the pronunciation of tare is off, it's 'tare' with a long A sound, not 'tar' with short A sound. Also, you should always center the lid on the scale.
Umit Akbey there's no reason to change this. When a scale weighs in grams, or a tenth of a gram, is still in grams as a unit of measure, not ounces or something. If you need to weigh something heavier, then you need a scale that's made to weigh heavier objects. You CAN accurately weigh something that's to the tenth of a gram with that scale. Example- 5.2g is accurate if something weighs 5.24. So, you can't accurately weigh something that's 1.52g with a .00, you'd need .000 to weigh to the .00 (hundredth) of a gram. So, this scale CAN accurately weigh things to the .0 (tenth) of a gram (like 5.2 grams), but you cannot say, with all accuracy that something that weighs 5.23g is actually 5.23g. It's considered that 5.2g is the only accurate measurement you can say with all certainty. This is used by the metal, jewel, and scientific communities. Look up 'sig figs' and 'scientific measurement' for more info on Google etc.
thanks man i asked that for a strange reason :) my 1000g (0.1g) scale somehow can only weight to a max of 50g now !, and with 0.01 accuracy ! i dont know how this happened i cannot get it back to normal :/
Dude, read the instructions, use it on a hard flat surface. No towel!!! "pretty close" is not accurate enough, no one else would be happy with that error margin. Try uploading a video on how to use a scale properly, what NOT to do, i.e. don't place it on a soft surface. After 5 years you have figured that out by now.... right?
Yes it will. Video is from 2012. I am always willing to learn something new. Thanks for watching.
How to do put back together the scale of you take off the little silver plate?
Tanita is the best for Pocket scales.
where did you get that frog from? looks cool
put your scale on a flat surface not on a towel or soft surface. it will not show you accurate balance.
I think You got To put your scale on a table,so You Will not loose any weigth.Maybe i'm wrong but i think it's The rigth Things To do
Just got the same exact scale only for 300 grams (stumbled upon this video by accident , awesome how I'm already subscribed)- anyhow, if the weight is inaccurate, you will need to re-calibrate it (should be in the instructions) - this is different from the "tare" function
+yuriythebest yeah you do that with small weights that are sold on ebay as a set in a nice case with tooth picks.
Interesting. When I was shopping for that type of scale I thought the X0.1g written on it means that it only shows one decimal place, so I got one that had X0.01g written on it. But apparently it always shows two decimal places. I guess that only means how accurate it is, not how many decimal places it shows on the screen. Oh well.
You can't tare weight a scale while holding it in the air like that. And I'm sorry, I don't mean to nitpick but the pronunciation of tare is off, it's 'tare' with a long A sound, not 'tar' with short A sound.
Also, you should always center the lid on the scale.
Lol I have the same scale but it has "DIGITAL SCALE" on it instead of AWS.
Tare is pronounced like Tearing paper, not taring the roof
put it on a hard flat surface you knob
Move your towel and it will work bang on
One Ounce = 28.3495231 g = 1 OZ (Unit Switch)
One Ounce Troy silver = 31.1035 g = 1 OZT (Unit Switch)
Different !!!
how can you change from 0.01g mode to 0.1g mode ?
Umit Akbey there's no reason to change this. When a scale weighs in grams, or a tenth of a gram, is still in grams as a unit of measure, not ounces or something. If you need to weigh something heavier, then you need a scale that's made to weigh heavier objects. You CAN accurately weigh something that's to the tenth of a gram with that scale. Example- 5.2g is accurate if something weighs 5.24. So, you can't accurately weigh something that's 1.52g with a .00, you'd need .000 to weigh to the .00 (hundredth) of a gram. So, this scale CAN accurately weigh things to the .0 (tenth) of a gram (like 5.2 grams), but you cannot say, with all accuracy that something that weighs 5.23g is actually 5.23g. It's considered that 5.2g is the only accurate measurement you can say with all certainty. This is used by the metal, jewel, and scientific communities. Look up 'sig figs' and 'scientific measurement' for more info on Google etc.
thanks man
i asked that for a strange reason :)
my 1000g (0.1g) scale somehow can only weight to a max of 50g now !, and with 0.01 accuracy !
i dont know how this happened
i cannot get it back to normal :/
thanks for showing us how shitty it is
Dude, read the instructions, use it on a hard flat surface. No towel!!!
"pretty close" is not accurate enough, no one else would be happy with that error margin.
Try uploading a video on how to use a scale properly, what NOT to do, i.e. don't place it on a soft surface.
After 5 years you have figured that out by now.... right?
السلام وعليكم
صباح الخير والورد
كمره
Fahd Qatar
5
It's not tar it out... It's called tare.. Lmao.. And ur scale is off alot
This is pathetic. You paid for 2oz of silver, and you really think they'd give you 2.19oz? LOL
j