On Tue, 19 Jul 2011 04:20:38 -0700 (PDT), Jim Wilkins
wrote:
On Jul 18, 11:56*pm, "DoN. Nichols" wrote:
...
* * * * Others would be a heavy chunk of steel machined to be an open
'C', with the indicator measuring the distance between the ends of the
'C' -- and the force applied to lips of the 'C'. *Again, you will need
some way to calibrate it.
...
* * * * * * * * DoN.
Here's a newer model of mine:
http://www.dataweigh.com/products/pr...ProductID=4671
Both were missing the shackle attachments, likely the reason they were
sold cheap.
The indicator point slides on a ~45° ramp on a rotatable plug which is
the gain adjustment. The indicator mounting clamp is the coarse zero
and the scale can be rotated for the fine zero trim.
As a chrome plated factory-made product it's nice and compact but I
think a ring would be easier to machine smooth enough to remove
surface defects at home, and a hydraulic cylinder with gauge easier to
calibrate from measured dimensions.
You could weigh the front axle of your vehicle on the truck scale at a
scrapyard and then use it for your calibration weight.
jsw
Anybody needs one..Ive got a similar scale that goes up to 500 kilos.
Snagged it when I was closing out a factory. Used it a few times with
the forklift to wiegh machinery, but would rather have one in pounds
rather than metric measurements
Gunner
--
Maxim 12: A soft answer turneth away wrath.
Once wrath is looking the other way, shoot it in the head.