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Posted

I don't know about "certifiable," but I know I immediately checked the accuracy of the $19.99 Berkley digital scale I picked up at Wal-Mart.  It's dead on, and has functioned perfectly for two seasons.  If it died tomorrow, I'd buy another one.

 

Owning an accurate scale can be a sobering experience.  :-)

 

Tight lines,

Bob

  • Like 4
  • Super User
Posted

I have a Rapala Digital 50lb scale.  Been using it for 2 years, pretty close to dead on.  You want it certified, well you're not going to find that one at a very inexpensive price.  

  • Like 1
  • Super User
Posted

Picked up a Field&Stream digiscale at Dick's for

about $25 (minus points I had) and it weighed

very accurately.

 

Until I lost it to Davey Jones' Locker.

 

I now use a Boga grip - 15lbs. Love it. Accurate.

But expensive.

  • Like 1
Posted

No. I have many. But a mechanical scale is always in the boat, and it always is true. Can't say the same for the digitals which need calibrating more often. 

Posted

I don't know about "certifiable," but I know I immediately checked the accuracy of the $19.99 Berkley digital scale I picked up at Wal-Mart.  It's dead on, and has functioned perfectly for two seasons.  If it died tomorrow, I'd buy another one.

 

Owning an accurate scale can be a sobering experience.  :-)

 

Tight lines,

Bob

I have had this one for a couple months now, and so far so good.

  • Super User
Posted

You don't have to spend that much on an accurate scale. I think I paid $20 for a lower end model at Bass Pro, and it was right on with a 5 lb weight. I've used it the last 4-5 years, and it's always been within a few oz.'s of the tourney scale.

  • Like 1
  • Super User
Posted

I have this one: http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/B000PB1RFG?keywords=RAPALA%20SCALE&qid=1445603004&ref_=sr_1_1&sr=8-1

 

I tested it with some weights. Seems pretty accurate. It was off a tiny bit on some weights, but these were really cheap cast iron dumbbell weights. I doubt them more than the scale. I also use it from the kayak and it gets wet with no trouble. But some reviews say that salt water can corrode it.

  • Super User
Posted

I think I paid $35 for my Rapala scale and it is very accurate. I'm not saying its certified accurate, but it's close enough for me. I've tested it with various objects that I know the weight of (bags of sugar, 5-8-10-12 pound dumbells, bottles of water, etc) and it's always spot on, or within an ounce. That's good enough for my purposes.

  • Like 1
  • Super User
Posted

Fish weigh exactly the same on my $19 berkley hand held as they do on the $300 dollar table top "equalizer" brand scale I bought for the tournaments I run......good enough for me.

  • Super User
Posted

My hand held scale lies.  I think it is a Quarrow.  It is hand held.   It measures dead weights with extreme accuracy.    Every fish that I put on the scale is a pound and a half to two pounds light.   I can't explain it, other than maybe the scale doesn't like bouncing around in the boat very much and so it lies to me when called upon.

  • Like 3
Posted

 

I use these too and they are very good. Bought ten for our cluds annual kids fishing day and all were accurate and work well. I added a $5 lock grip to mine.

  • Super User
Posted

I use several different models of Rapala scales. While they are probably not certifiable, they have proven to be accurate - usually within 1 ounce at the 10 pound range.  I load test each scale that I buy with a 9.804 pound test weight - the worst has been off by 2 ounces. The test procedure, information on how the test load was prepared and weight determined, and test results of the first three scales were reported in this thread:  Rapala Mini Digital Scale - Load Test Report   Here's a photo of the scales in the linked thread (showing Unit 2 reading about 1/2 ounce light to the test weight):

 

gallery_25379_576_71765.jpg

 

 

 

 

Fisher-O-men:   I had seen you post about these "luggage" scales a number of times in our periodic 'what's a good scale' threads. Finally, I had to see for myself.  I ordered two of these scales and received them within a couple days.  A whopping $7.98 for TWO scales, shipped !

 

Here's the scales (labeled unit 1 and 2) and the test weight.  The scales are very small (2" W x 3.5" L), they will weigh in either kilograms, pounds, ounces, and a Chinese measurement - the Jin (whatever the heck that is), and have separate buttons for power, unit of measure, and tare.  They seem to be reasonably well-made and all the buttons/features work properly.  The hooks are too small for my method of weighing (gill slit) but they could be replaced with larger hooks or used along with a fish grip.

 

gallery_25379_1632_285236.jpg

 

 

So, how do they weigh - good, bad, or ugly?  Actually, they are VERY accurate. Here's Unit 1 under load - reading 9.80 pounds - dead-on the test weight.

 

gallery_25379_1632_152463.jpg

 

Here's Unit 2 under load - reading 9.81 pounds - less than .01 pound over the test weight.

 

gallery_25379_1632_257909.jpg

 

Both scales were also very repeatable - powering down the units and then powering back up and re-applying the load nearly always resulted in the same weight. The biggest observed variance was .02 pound (less than 1/3 of an ounce).

 

Remarkable as it might seem, these scales are the equal of, if not more accurate, than the Rapala scales that I have been using. I do have 6 years of field experience with the Rapala scales and have a good idea of their continued accuracy and reasonable durability over that time.  The long term serviceability of these little luggage scales is unknown.

 

Load cell technology has certainly reached bargain prices, even for an off-shore product. Given the results of this quick load-testing, I feel that the $7.98 was well-spent.  Even if someone did not want to use this scale for daily use, it would serve well as a back-up scale to keep in the boat, tackle bag, car/truck, etc.  

 

Assuming these things will continue to work properly (and Fisher-O-men apparently has had good luck with them), there is absolutely NO reason for anyone NOT to have a scale  (except for those that don't want to know that their "6 pounders" actually weigh about 3.5 pounds... :lol: ).

  • Like 5
  • Super User
Posted

I hope everybody reads this last thread because with this info there is no monetary excuse not to have a scale.

  • Like 4
  • Super User
Posted

I been using a state certified scale at a nearby local deli.

But I c&r them. Now with the new slot limit law they can't leave the waters edge. I have a mechanical scale but need a new one too. Well Christmas is coming.

Need to carry two measuring tapes.

  • Global Moderator
Posted

I hope everybody reads this last thread because with this info there is no monetary excuse not to have a scale.

Hey, a man can dream. 

  • Like 1
  • Super User
Posted

My hand held scale lies.  I think it is a Quarrow.  It is hand held.   It measures dead weights with extreme accuracy.    Every fish that I put on the scale is a pound and a half to two pounds light.   I can't explain it, other than maybe the scale doesn't like bouncing around in the boat very much and so it lies to me when called upon.

My son has this scale. I believe it is the same thing as the Field and Stream mentioned earlier. He got it at Dicks on clearance for $12.00. Nice little grip/ scale combo. I used it last time out and had the same issue. Got one I thought was close to 4 and it read 2 something. Then my son told me how to work it. This scale has to be turned on after you have the fish in the grips. Shut it off for a few seconds, turned it back on and bam. 3-13.

Try not turning it on until you have the fish gripped and see if it makes a difference. He worked at Dicks and checked every digital scale they sell with a 5 lb. dumbell. He said every brand was within an ounce or two. Thats not to say you can't get a stinker or it won't go bad on you.

Posted

Well is there anyone on here that has (1) from e-bay that they would like to sell or trade for some custom jigs? Apparently e-bay is out of stock?  Thanks in advance

  • Super User
Posted

Well is there anyone on here that has (1) from e-bay that they would like to sell or trade for some custom jigs? Apparently e-bay is out of stock?  Thanks in advance

 

There are MANY vendors on eBay selling the same scale. However, most are in China with insane estimated shipping times.  While the link that Fisher-O-men provided went to about the cheapest USA located vendor...there is another source on eBay that is USA based but wants about $1.50 more for the scale for a total of about $4.50 shipped.  Search eBay and you'll find it.

Posted

There are MANY vendors on eBay selling the same scale. However, most are in China with insane estimated shipping times.  While the link that Fisher-O-men provided went to about the cheapest USA located vendor...there is another source on eBay that is USA based but wants about $1.50 more for the scale for a total of about $4.50 shipped.  Search eBay and you'll find it.

 

Thanks. $1.50 isn't a deal breaker for me, so I will try to find it. Thank You.

  • 3 months later...
  • Super User
Posted

Just a follow-on to the "luggage scale" that I reported on earlier in this thread...

Starting in January, I placed one of these scales in service ("Unit 1") and will use it as my primary bank-fishing scale for all of this year. Unit 1 continues to read dead-on the 9.80 pound test weight and we'll see where it ends up at the end of the year. Also to be observed is battery life (2-AAA) on this scale as compared to the 9v battery used on the Rapala scales.

As shown in the below photo, I did have to remove the stock, small hook and replace it with 3 links of chain and a hook borrowed from one of my Rapala scales.  So far, I'm liking this little scale. It disappears in the belt pack that I wear bank-fishing and powers up fast.

I ESPECIALLY like the "Lock" feature (see the photo, top-right of the LCD display). When the scale senses that the load is static, it locks the weight and retains that weight until you clear it or after a set period when it will zero the scale. A handy feature that allows me to weigh the fish, get it back in the water, then record the weight. Perhaps other digital scales have this feature, but my Rapala scales do not.

I've set a reminder in my computer for early December to report back on how the scale fared over a years service.

 

Luggage Scale.JPG

Posted

I picked up a cheap cabelas scale looks just like the luggage one featured above. It's accurate enough and fits easily in my back pack or pocket for bank fishing. 5 bucks

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