Seek
Apprentice Daydreamer
I don't need any expensive sensitive digital scale. It's actually really easy to make an analog one with high precision with almost zero cost. So far it worked really well for me.
It takes more time to measure with that, but it can be even more precise than a 0.01g digital. It can measure even miligrams precisely if you give it enough time and can handle up to 10 grams or so.
How to make it:
1) Take a wooden skewer and cut 3 ring on it that are the same distance apart each other and as far as possible.
2) Get/build 2 plates and tie them to the 2 outer rings (The knot must be on the bottom side of the skewer).
3) Get/build a base and tie it to the middle ring (The knot must be on top of the skewer. It should be tied like this, i think it's called a reef knot).
4) Calibrate to zero by cutting out tiny pieces of matter from the heavier end.
5) You have a sensitive analog scale.
You just have to be a little more patient using it. ANY wind affects it a lot because of its sensitivity. So it is best used when wind-shielded (in a box with one open side), don't breathe at it and wait like 10-30 seconds for it to stabilize and give you the answer.
You can also get some set of light weights so you can measure absolutely.
I've made several of these, they all work great. If you just need to precisely measure anything at home occasionaly, it's all you need.
A photo of this kind of scale.
It takes more time to measure with that, but it can be even more precise than a 0.01g digital. It can measure even miligrams precisely if you give it enough time and can handle up to 10 grams or so.
How to make it:
1) Take a wooden skewer and cut 3 ring on it that are the same distance apart each other and as far as possible.
2) Get/build 2 plates and tie them to the 2 outer rings (The knot must be on the bottom side of the skewer).
3) Get/build a base and tie it to the middle ring (The knot must be on top of the skewer. It should be tied like this, i think it's called a reef knot).
4) Calibrate to zero by cutting out tiny pieces of matter from the heavier end.
5) You have a sensitive analog scale.
You just have to be a little more patient using it. ANY wind affects it a lot because of its sensitivity. So it is best used when wind-shielded (in a box with one open side), don't breathe at it and wait like 10-30 seconds for it to stabilize and give you the answer.
You can also get some set of light weights so you can measure absolutely.
I've made several of these, they all work great. If you just need to precisely measure anything at home occasionaly, it's all you need.
A photo of this kind of scale.
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