MagickalKat777
Bluelight Crew
How is a balance that measures in .0001mg not microgram when .001mg is 1mg?
How is a balance that measures in .0001mg not microgram when .001mg is 1mg?
Because the Mettler AC100 measures with an accuracy of 0.0001g=0.1mg in its full range upto 100g, as stated on the auction site and not in 0.0001mg devisions as you wrote.
I've seen microgram balances occasionally go on ebay but they usually have an upper weighing limit of 5g.
Not worth the money. Very accurate but drifts easily... Honestly you could just get an old generation lab balance from eBay for cheap... these are microgram balances...
Like this one..
http://cgi.ebay.com/ws/eBayISAPI.dll?ViewItem&item=190444197617&ssPageName=STRK:MEWAX:IT
It measures a 1g weight (that's not a high quality one anyway) at 1.0008mg... not bad accuracy at all. Needs some cleanup from corrosion but honestly, that's a steal for a microgram balance. Just set your shit on a tray... this is a real professional scale...
whats it called? What did u search on ebay to find it?
Are you really so lazy that you can't click the link and look at the item description? Seriously...
Okay, I suppose I can appreciate all the concerns and speculations into my intentions.
So tell me then, What do I want and why do I want it? Give it to me straight, top to bottom.
well there was another thread, but it disappeared. i had a big old response typed up, so here it is
A US$20 scale has served me quite well for 2C-x and other compounds active in the 20mg range. As long as you don't bang it around, keep it clean, and always have fresh batteries on hand they're quite accurate. Like ALL scales (even the $5000 ones) they are sometimes 1000% inaccurate when weighing anything in the vicinity of 0.001g (1mg). Always weigh at least 0.010g (10mg) of material at one time.
Proper balance technique involves a flat, stable, air-current-free workspace that is free of other electric, electronic, or magnetic devices. A scale generally does not need to warm up, but if your batteries are not fresh you may notice a drifting inaccuracy.
Turn on the scale and press TARE. It should read zero and be stable. Place the weighing dish on the pad and record the mass. Repeat 3 times and take an average. Ideally all the numbers will be the same. You should keep this information with the dish and use it as a calibration check.
Do not re-tare the scale. It is at its highest accuracy when it is measuring the mass of the dish plus the mass of your compound.
Using a static-free clean spatula (stainless steel works best), place a small amount of material in the dish. Record the new mass displayed. If your material is homogeneous, you should be able to compare the visual appearance of your compound with its indicated mass.
THIS IS THE ONLY TIME IT IS SAFE TO "EYEBALL": estimate the amount of compound you will need to add in order to get the desired amount of total compound. Use a pencil and write down the number that you are shooting for, and what it means (subtract the weight of the dish on paper). This is to minimize accidental weighing of too much compound and trying to put it back into its original container.
Add small amounts of compound to the dish until you are close to the correct value. Be sure to write down the ACTUAL final mass of compound. Gently remove the dish from the scale and ensure that it still returns to zero without you pressing TARE. Placing the dish back on the scale should return it to the recorded weight.
Transfer the compound into your appropriate vehicle (if it is a single dose) or clean container that you will use for liquid measurement. Use your ACTUAL value of mass (for example, 2.446g dish+compound minus 2.203g dish equals 0.243g or 243mg of compound) when performing the appropriate liquid measurement calculations (found in the B&D thread on that topic). You should be able to rinse the weighing dish into your liq container to ensure 99.9% transfer of the compound.
My gempro-250 has been absolutely amazikng and has treated me well for about 8 months or so now, would recommend this scale to anyone for weighing out RC's![]()