"Hmm. It looks," I thought to myself, "like it's time for a diet."
I've never dieted in my life. Being a goals freak, I decided to create a spreadsheet and measure progress daily. I figured I could increase activity and reduce intake to the tune of 500 calories a day, giving me a one pound per week weight loss glide path to success. I pulled out our trusty bathroom scale to get a starting point.
I couldn't read the thing. With my glasses or without them, I couldn't read the dial. I went to Target and picked out a digital scale with big numbers, brought it home and stood on it. I got a number. I stood on it again. I got a different number. And again. The scale readout was good to 0.2 pounds, but the sensor looked to be accurate to plus or minus 3 pounds. That was totally unsatisfactory for my daily data collection. I'd have no idea at all if I was heading in the right direction for weeks.
Googling the issue, I came across the scale below. It's totally awesome. It gives you the same result every time. It may not be perfectly accurate, but it's perfectly consistent, which is the most important feature of all. It's the delta that matters, not the actual values. So long as I see I'm on my glide path, or close enough to it, I'm good.
If you need a reliable scale, you could do a lot worse than this one.
Hey, that's the same one I just got a couple of months ago! It does work very nicely, and I agree the reproducibility is way better than the cheap $10 mechanical scale we used to use. It is accurate enough to detect the weight change from drinking a glass of water (about half a pound).
ReplyDeleteOutstanding! That's the kind of accuracy I appreciate.
ReplyDeleteI bought that one too!
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