Someone wrote: I'm not sure that I trust these scales.
Well, I have the same concerns. However, I was told by the person who lent
the chapter scales to me, that the DAR was accepting the W & B taken with
those scales. I think that the important thing is to have a set of scales
that will give clo
: krnet-bounces+brian.kraut=engalt@mylist.net
[mailto:krnet-bounces+brian.kraut=engalt@mylist.net]On Behalf Of Dan
Heath
Sent: Monday, February 07, 2005 7:22 PM
To: kr...@mylist.net
Subject: KR> Bathroom Scales
Someone wrote: I'm not sure that I trust these scales.
Well, I have
Brian Kraut wrote:
>
> This assumes that you have access to an accurate scale for your
> calibration.
Use the one at the post office. It would be best if there were no witnesses
;)
--
Steve
N205FT
mystic...@swbell.net
He who seeks will find, and he who knocks will be let in.
That is much more accurate than just adjusting the scales to read
zero then expecting them to be accurate at 250 pounds.
Water is a relatively accurate "known" weight for calibration purposes.
Steve J
Buying some of the heavy, round exercise weights at a garage sale would also be
a relatively accurate way to calibrate your scale. You could even borrow a set
from someone.
Denny ...
Stephen Jacobs wrote:
That is much more accurate than just adjusting the scales to read
zero then expecting the
5 matches
Mail list logo