Balance

Discussion in 'Coin Chat' started by Kentucky, Feb 9, 2019.

  1. Kentucky

    Kentucky Supporter! Supporter

    From Fry's Electronics...
    Screenshot 2019-02-09 at 4.22.55 PM.png
     
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  3. Santinidollar

    Santinidollar Supporter! Supporter

  4. -jeffB

    -jeffB Greshams LEO Supporter

    Five hundred by 0.01g?

    Seven dollars?

    Sigh...
     
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  5. Kentucky

    Kentucky Supporter! Supporter

    I have the $6 version that only goes to 200.00 g and it seems to work OK.
     
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  6. xlrcable

    xlrcable Active Member

    I have the common 100 x .01 and I kind of like it that it isn’t trying so hard.
     
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  7. Bambam8778

    Bambam8778 Well-Known Member

    Worth it for $7!
     
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  8. GDJMSP

    GDJMSP Numismatist Moderator

    Yeah, I know what ya mean. How can something that actually works, with any degree of accuracy, be so inexpensive ?

    But then I start to remember things. Like the 1st "pocket" calculator I ever bought. And I put pocket in quotes because the thing was about 7 inches long, 4 inches wide, and 1 1/2 inches thick, and all it did was basic math. And yet it cost me $85 - and that was considered cheap at the time !

    And today they might cost you what - $5 ? And be the size of a credit card and do all forms of advanced math.

    So yeah, I was thinking along the same lines as you when I bought a small scale similar to that some years ago, it gave 4 decimal places, and paid about $20 for it. But it worked, and it worked quite well, and accurately and consistently.

    I guess the point I'm trying to make is that cost does not always equal value, nor does something being inexpensive mean it doesn't work.

    No, it may not have the degree of accuracy that a fine precision instrument in a lab might have, but is that what you're really after when you're trying to weigh a coin ? Given the tolerance levels that all coins are made with, have always been made with, a lab quality scale really isn't required. Especially since weight doesn't prove anything, one way or the other in regard to the coin being genuine, to begin with. All weight is, is an indicator. And close is good enough for that.
     
  9. Nyatii

    Nyatii I like running w/scissors. Makes me feel dangerous

    If I remember right, the first Texas Instruments calculator cost around $100, and all it did was add, subtract, multiply, and divide.
    About 20 years ago, I then saw a cheap calculator for .79 cents.
     
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  10. Agree with the above. Price and quality do not always go hand in hand. Years ago while doing craft shows with my wife when an item wouldn't sell we would raise the price and sell out. Go figure. It's human nature I believe. If it cost more it must be better.
     
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  11. -jeffB

    -jeffB Greshams LEO Supporter

    Okay, you all seem to be misinterpreting my comment, and understandably so.

    My sigh was one of regret (and jealousy), because I've been in Fry's, but the closest one is a six-hour drive from here. :(

    I totally believe that it's a legit scale, with legit specs. It's just that it's a lot better than my 50-by-0.01g scale, or my 30-by-0.001g scale (just a bit short of a troy ounce), and (was) priced at a third of what I paid for them a few years ago. So, yeah, "sigh".

    And, @GDJMSP, I won't even start into what a scale of that capacity and resolution would've cost back in the 1970s, when I was a young chemistry geek. For starters, it would've been mechanical, and big. (Although not as big or mechanical as an "adding machine"...!)
     
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  12. Nyatii

    Nyatii I like running w/scissors. Makes me feel dangerous

    You ought to have seen a Univac with paper tape and card operating system. Not to count the support system of card punches, collators, etc.
     
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  13. LA_Geezer

    LA_Geezer Well-Known Member

    I had a Smith-Corona in the early 70s that I bought on sale for $125; it went south real quick and was replaced by the TI "MBA" calculator for about the same money.
     
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  14. -jeffB

    -jeffB Greshams LEO Supporter

    My first full-time summer job was in a computing center with CDC equipment. I've seen it all. (And heard it -- a 150-card-per-minute automated punch is LOUD.)
     
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  15. John Skelton

    John Skelton Morgan man!

    A lot of people believe that something being sold cheap must be. You get what you pay for, right? Now I get more memory in my Kindle than I had when buying disk drives for the county MIS department back in the 90s.
     
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  16. juris klavins

    juris klavins Well-Known Member

    LoL - today's cheapest laptop can compute circles around those behemoths :woot:

    maxresdefault (3).jpg

    and forget about those electric bills :eek:

    article-2163011-13BA5268000005DC-822_468x348.jpg
     
    Last edited: Feb 10, 2019
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  17. -jeffB

    -jeffB Greshams LEO Supporter

    Love the pair of Tektronix 500-series scopes in the middle! I miss the days of being able to troubleshoot computer issues with an oscilloscope. (At least, one that cost less than five figures...)
     
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  18. juris klavins

    juris klavins Well-Known Member

    cost to assemble $1, purchased in bulk @ $2, sold for $7, added shipping $5 = profit ;)
     
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  19. Kentucky

    Kentucky Supporter! Supporter

    My earliest "fake" memory is when I was a Freshman in college in 1963 and bought a Sans and Streif (sp) slide rule. II seem to remember some students having TI calculators that cost $100 and added, subtracted multiplied and divided... Can't be true though since pocket calculators only became available in the early 70's.
     
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  20. Santinidollar

    Santinidollar Supporter! Supporter

    Nah. Slide rules were still the standard when I was in high school in the early 70s.
     
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  21. chrisild

    chrisild Coin Collector

    Maybe, and maybe not. ;) After all, we also use much more computing power these days. Cloud services (Microsoft, Amazon, etc.) require lots of energy - and blockchain infrastructure (think Bitcoin) is not free either. See here for example, and that is BTC only ...

    Christian
     
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