Weigh Gram Scale Digital Pocket Scale,100g by 0.01g,Digital Grams Scale, Food Scale, Jewelry Scale Black, Kitchen Scale 100g
$9
- Pocket Scale allows you to weigh a maximum capacity of a 100g and readabilities of 0.01g, to guarantee you an accurate and precise weighing session
- Pocket Scale designed with a stainless steel platform and a protective flip cover, this pocket scale is a lightweight and Portable for easy transfer.
- Pocket Scale have easy touch buttons, large size digits and stark contrast LCD blue backlit display, makes it easy to read in all light conditions.
- Pocket Scale Featuring 4 different weight modes: g / oz / ozt / dwt for easy weight translations, tare function for net determination and a 60 second auto shut off to preserve battery life
- Pocket Scale You Use the Weigh Gram Pocket scale to measure a versatile range of objects. Such as; Gold, Silver, Coins, Jewelry, Gems and other small knickknacks
Specification: Weigh Gram Scale Digital Pocket Scale,100g by 0.01g,Digital Grams Scale, Food Scale, Jewelry Scale Black, Kitchen Scale 100g
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10 reviews for Weigh Gram Scale Digital Pocket Scale,100g by 0.01g,Digital Grams Scale, Food Scale, Jewelry Scale Black, Kitchen Scale 100g
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Mel Pond –
It came calibrated well-enough out of the box. The thing with precision scales like this one, however, is that they drift over time and lose accuracy. The only way to maintain their accuracy is by regularly calibrating them. This one needs a 100g calibration weight—not included, which is annoying given how necessary it is. But oh well, it’s cheap.
The instructions are printed on the lid, but here’s what you do: (1) Put the empty scale into calibration mode; (2) Press the MODE button. This teaches the scale what 0g (ie, nothing) feels like; (3) Put the 100g weight on the scale. Wait for the display to say PASS. This teaches the scale what 100g feels like.
These two points become the new reference points for your scale. Think of it like reminding the scale what 0 grams and 100 grams is supposed to feel like. I read a 1-star review down below where some guy was complaining that the scale was junk. What he did was put a 50g weight on it, “as a test,” for calibration. Then he was shocked when the scale said PASS and didn’t work so good anymore. No kidding—you’ve taught it that 50g is 100g.
Chris. –
Scale worked for about a month and needed daily recalibration. After a month (1 day after return date) the scale froze and read the word “FULL”and nothing can be done to reset it. None of the buttons work and even taking out the batteries didn’t reset it. Contacted the company who vaguely replied they have to check with the factory. No further replies after that. Avoid this product all together and the company. Wish I could have given it less than 1star
somejoe –
TLDR: Decent value, fairly accurate/precise, fast measurements. Buttons suck.
In my haphazard testing, it only seems to be accurate to .02g from .07g to 100.02g and wont register below .05g total weight. However, the cheap weights, mediocre surface, or I could be to blame. The buttons are terrible, my power button seems to have stopped working and the included batteries probably wont last long.
Jeanette M. –
I tried Calibrate the scale multiple times but it would not calibrate right so I was going to send it back but my return window closed. It’s a really good scale but calibration isn’t so I’ll just resale it online it was weighing a nickel 0.6 grams are 1.1 a nickel is 5.0
Mel Gareau –
I found these scales to be unstable and inaccurate. At very small amounts the scale would fail to register then at random it would register an amount. When this amount was weighed again it would register a completely different amount! I used the scale on various work surfaces in case the surface was effecting the measurement but no. I may have purchased a faulty product as many people have found these scales to be great but mine sadly is unstable and inaccurate.
Tom Harman –
It’s funny that I can search Amazon for crack scale and this is what comes up, but anyways it seems pretty accurate, I actually use it to weigh in grams or ounces for gold and silver, and do far seems to do the job perfect on confirming what I’ve received.
william wieczorek –
When I ordered this to weigh my dogs meds I didn’t think much about it til I didn’t have it anymore. I gave it to a friend and thought no biggie I’ll just buy another one..OMG what a nightmare! I ordered an AWS pocket scale and it only weighed a gram and over..I ended up buying and returning 3 AWS and one other brand..so a total of FOUR pocket scales. My gf finally just gave my Weigh Gram back to me because I kept borrowing it back. I’ve never had an issue with THIS particular scale..I’d bought another WG some time ago and it didn’t work at all even after calibrating it. So after all this bs I finally figured out its just a crap shoot with ALL these pocket scales on whether you get one that actually works or not. I feel bad I gave her a scale & I have it back, so I’m still on the hunt for a RELIABLE pocket scale, I’ve done more research & know more than I EVER wanted to know about pocket scales FFS. I’m terrified of ordering ANOTHER one with the hopes of getting a “good one” by chance. Wish me luck.
Becky and Kyle Hedrick –
its pretty accurate until you get under 100mg. i found it pretty difficult to accurately measure out 50 mg of powder. also, it didnt come with a calibration weight.
Kindle Customer –
I bought this with a set of calibration weights, calibrated it with the 100g weight per the instructions and the scale is spot on. I think the negative reviews are from people who don’t know you need to calibrate this scale to maintain accuracy. Overall I am happy with my purchase, I can now weigh out my fertilizer easily and accurately.
John A –
The scale is the perfect size and it is very easy to use. The only issue is, it is not perfectly accurate. If I weigh two pennies from the same year, the scale may be .2 grams off. For example, a copper penny from 1982 weighs 3.11 grams. The scale may show one to weight 3.0, the next may weigh 3.22, and the third may be 2.99. Same goes for 1982 (non-copper) pennies. Instead of showing the weight of 2.5 grams, it may be 2.65 or something similar. It is still accurate enough to know which is copper and which isn’t, but some coins that may matter even more.