Which coin scale do you use, why, and where can I get a good one? Thank you so much for any and all replies.
I went with a simple digital scale for my ancients. It has worked pretty well for me with no issues. https://www.amazon.com/Fuzion-Porta...ds=DIGITAL+SCALE+POCKET&qid=1614276977&sr=8-8
I didn't follow the link to the one posted, but I would suggest that you buy a digital scale that measures in 100ths of a gram rather than only 10ths. It will be much more accurate by definition, and therefore much more useful.
My first one was a WiseField Digital Pocket Jewelry Scale 200g/0.01g - and many times I got different readings for the same coin - so, after a while I got an American Weigh Scales - Digital Milligram Scale - Multi-Use, 20 x 0.001g and problem solved for coins weighting <= 20 g. For the heavier ones I still use the WiseField one
For coins with no weight information? To confirm the dealer information? For doing specific gravity tests?
Mine is very similar to @Exodus_gear - but not identical. It is accurate to .01 grams. Very useful when you need to weigh bulk lot coins or others that came without size/weight measures. To check size I have a caliper rated to the tenth of a millimeter. (Got it for $10 on Amazon).
This is my scale, also a Fuzion: https://www.amazon.com/gp/product/B07L8ZVVRM/ref=ppx_yo_dt_b_search_asin_title?ie=UTF8&psc=1 . I recommend it.
I also prefer weights to 0.01 gm. I have a Smart Weigh jewelry digital scale which seems to be pretty accurate. I also have a Ohaus triple beam balance (remember high school chemistry?) which is very accurate, but significantly slower to use. It is useful for confirmation of digital weights and weighing heavier items that exceed the digital scale’s limit.
I have just the dish part of the weight scale like yours. It is circled in red. If you click on the image it will show it up close.
I do also but warn not to take that last digit too seriously. Whether you get one, two or three digits, don't take that last digit as gospel. The Fuzion has two advantages as I see it. Many scales come with a 100g calibration weight and its is only 50g which is closer to the weight of the coins it will be used for. I would prefer a unit that would allow you to adjust calibration at any level so you could match your scale to the ones owned by you favorite dealer. My average coin is closer to 3 grams so I would prefer something that was more accurate there than at the top number.
I went to my local 'head' shop and unsurprisingly they had many scales at all price levels. The staff was most helpful too ... although I'm not sure if they believed me when I said I needed a scale for weighing coins. Lol They also had calibration weights.
Hey, that is what I have! It has been a great scale for me. Up to 200g (I have several AES Grave, and to the 100th decimal. (I try only to record to the 10th - doesn't matter after that... but the Hundredth Decimal place is great for weight Tetartemorions.
LOL, Donna has the Super-Duper, Construction Zone, Tonka-Truck-Yellow version! LOL, YEAH, I LIKE it! That would be worth the extra $4 for me!
David in a "head" shop buying a digital scale for coins has to be the best mental picture of the year so far! SC