Thanks for this video. The scale looks great for my application, measuring fluid flow rates with a change in mass. This was an excellent demonstration and explanation. We will be ordering this shortly.
@maushammer10 жыл бұрын
Great video, thanks. I gotta kid you at 3:02 -- "tea, like you'd make your coffee with" :-p
@babilafonyuy22919 жыл бұрын
The video is well educative for student. how can some one easily down load the calibration procedure of a weighing scale? because that is the problem am facing as a student technician.
@balancesDOTcom9 жыл бұрын
fonyuy cyrille You can download the user manual on the Sartorius AY Series at scaleman.com/sartorius-ay212-acculab-vic212-sartorius-elt202-scales.html In the manual you will find the calibration procedure for the Sartorius AY Series.
@scaleman316 жыл бұрын
great video.. big help
@David1200513 жыл бұрын
well done - thanks
@worddunlap8 жыл бұрын
Hmm? I will speak to my fellow gun toters and tell them they are being unreasonable. Personally I suggest they use mechanical scales such as triple beams but for some reason they like digital stuff. Keep in mind that many are preparing for SHTF, zombie apocalypse or a similar event and they don't need to depend on electricity anyway. Together we can educate them.
@balancesDOTcom8 жыл бұрын
+worddunlap Most of the competition shooters no longer use mechanical beam scales since they can not get the accuracy needed to weigh out powder to the kernel. Most buy the Sartorius Entris64-1S at balance.balances.com/scales/65 Some people willing to accept +/- 2 kernels buy a milligram balance like the FX700CT at balance.balances.com/scales/1654 or FX-120i at balance.balances.com/scales/1223/ A single kernel of Varget weighs ± 0.02 grains and the FX-120i increments in 0.02 grain divisions (0.02 gn > 0.04 gn > 0.06 gn, etc) and the linearity (or accuracy) is ± two(2) divisions or ± 0.04 grains. When shooting .308 ammo, on average, a single kernel of Varget roughly changes the velocity by 1.3 fps. So just a few kernels of variation can easily double the extreme spread in velocity. Out to 500+- yards it does not seem to make much difference, but beyond that and things can get ugly fast. Buying the right balance is just another tool to put more bullets closer to the desired point of impact. It's all a matter of perspective and at what level one wishes to perform. Buy the FX700CT or FX-120i and it is a good weighing device but it is doubtful you are not going to win shooting competitions. Any way one looks at it, serious long-range shooting is not cheap. In their world, it often comes down to one point or even one "X" between winning or not. Remember the motto -- buy once cry once -- If you stray from this motto it will bit you. Most F-Class competition shooters have spent well over $5000 for their gun so why cheap out purchasing one of the most critical accessory needed - a balance for weighing powder. We always recommend the Sartorius Entris64-1S at balance.balances.com/scales/65