On Tue, 19 May 2015 10:24:59 -0600, graham > wrote:
>On 19/05/2015 9:18 AM, sf wrote:
>> On 19 May 2015 11:37:11 GMT, notbob > wrote:
>>
>>> On 2015-05-19, taxed and spent > wrote:
>>>>
>>>> "Sqwertz" > wrote in message
>>>
>>>> it does 0.01 ounces and 0.001 pounds
>>>
>>> Does it do 10 lbs?
>>>
>>> Typically, scales trade off preceision for range.
>>>
>>> One half ounce to ten pounds is a good range for the kitchen. Finer
>>> precision typically reduces the range. You can buy scales that do
>>> 0.01 ounce and will also weigh over 10 lbs, but bring $$$$. 
>>>
>> I have a nice scale that is calibrated to weigh the usual numbers
>> accurately. Go between them and it's a crap shoot. When I'm dividing
>> dough into equal pieces by weight, I can weigh one, weigh more, go
>> back to the first and the weight is significantly different.
>>
>Make sure the scale is sitting away from any joint in the surface of
>your counter top. I had your problem until I realised that the formica
>had distorted the substrate near the joins. I now check mine with a
>couple of old Canadian dollar coins (looneys) that weigh 7 grams. The
>new ones are lighter.
>Graham
Naturally any scale should be placed on a level stable surface... and
electronic scales are easy to zero out, no looneys required... place
on a level stable surface and hit the tare.