Scale reading vary wildly
ShrinkingDucky
Posts: 12 Member
I put my scales in two different places in the same room and there was a 32lb weight difference.
The battery is new, so I know that's not the cause and the flooring has no obvious fluctuations. Do I put them in one place and just focus on the number getting smaller (even though it's not accurate) or do I get new scales?
The battery is new, so I know that's not the cause and the flooring has no obvious fluctuations. Do I put them in one place and just focus on the number getting smaller (even though it's not accurate) or do I get new scales?
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Replies
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If you can, put them in one place and leave them there. However, a 32lb difference sounds a lot. Are the scales placed on solid flooring?1
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3 pound fluctuation I can see, but 32 poiunds sounds like a serious scale defect. I keep ours in the same place and I keep some weights nearby. I weigh the weights every time to see if the scale is accurate before I use it. I know ours is 2 ounces off for example. I'd get a new scale.1
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32 pounds is a crazy difference. Is your scale on a hard/even surface?1
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Did you forget a decimal? 3.2 pounds is easily understandable. 32 pounds would be the variance if moved the scale AND picked up my dog.1
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Do you have something you can weigh that you are fairly sure is accurate? An unopened gallon of milk for example? That way you can check your scales accuracy. Someone above mentioned weighing the same item prior to weighing themselves to verify that the scale works.
I would definitely check to see if your scale is ever accurate. If it isn’t, get a new one.0 -
when you move a digital scale (was it a digital scale?), you're supposed to re-calibrate it by stepping on it and getting off a couple times. also sometimes it helps to remove the battery again for 60 to 90 seconds, then replace it. that reset my new scale perfectly; it was between 30 and 45 pounds off till i removed and replaced the battery (btw, manufacturer support told me to try that).1
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Did you forget a decimal? 3.2 pounds is easily understandable. 32 pounds would be the variance if moved the scale AND picked up my dog.32 pounds is a crazy difference. Is your scale on a hard/even surface?Dogmom1978 wrote: »Do you have something you can weigh that you are fairly sure is accurate? An unopened gallon of milk for example? That way you can check your scales accuracy. Someone above mentioned weighing the same item prior to weighing themselves to verify that the scale works.
I would definitely check to see if your scale is ever accurate. If it isn’t, get a new one.Strudders67 wrote: »If you can, put them in one place and leave them there. However, a 32lb difference sounds a lot. Are the scales placed on solid flooring?
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Maybe buy a piece of wood or a large ceramic tile to put under the scales?0
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Yeah, it won't work correctly on carpet. How about outside the front door?1
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Yep carpet's the problem. What about a cork mat, you can buy them fairly cheap for bathrooms. There are some scales you can use on the carpet, some of the more expensive ones, maybe someone here reading this has some and will say what sort.0
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As others have said, the carpet is causing the issue. I would try to find another location that has either a hardwood floor or ceramic tile.0
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Bathtub? Or shower floor?0
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