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-   -   What's a good Scale for home use? (http://www.weightlossbanter.net/showthread.php?t=19685)

Larry S August 30th, 2004 11:52 AM

What's a good Scale for home use?
 
I have a 7 yr old electronic model that can range within 4 lbs, when
stepping on it four different times within a minute.

Can anyone recommend a reasonably priced one for home use?

Larry

LC since 6/21/04
293/262.5/190





carla August 30th, 2004 12:22 PM

Larry S wrote:
I have a 7 yr old electronic model that can range within 4 lbs, when
stepping on it four different times within a minute.

Can anyone recommend a reasonably priced one for home use?

I just got one of the Tanita scales that includes a body fat percentage
monitor. I'm having fun with it. Its display reads to 0.2 pounds and 0.5%
bodyfat, which is far more precise than is really necessary, but if you are
the kind of person who isn't driven insane by daily fluctuations that should
not be a problem for you. I don't know what "reasonably priced" means to
you - the Tanita scales start at $35-40, I think, which is a bit more than a
no-frills scale, but is not stratospheric.

--
carla
http://geekofalltrades.typepad.com/geek



Roger Zoul August 30th, 2004 01:22 PM

Larry S wrote:
:: I have a 7 yr old electronic model that can range within 4 lbs, when
:: stepping on it four different times within a minute.
::
:: Can anyone recommend a reasonably priced one for home use?

There is no real need to get rid of it. 4 lbs is only 1.5% of your
bodyweight. If you watch the threads, then you'll know that you're losing.
Also, it is not uncommon for weight to bought up and down from day to day.
Just try to make sure you only get on it at the same time and under the same
conditions, (eg., in the am before eating but after taking a dump, etc.).



Roger Zoul August 30th, 2004 01:22 PM

Larry S wrote:
:: I have a 7 yr old electronic model that can range within 4 lbs, when
:: stepping on it four different times within a minute.
::
:: Can anyone recommend a reasonably priced one for home use?

There is no real need to get rid of it. 4 lbs is only 1.5% of your
bodyweight. If you watch the threads, then you'll know that you're losing.
Also, it is not uncommon for weight to bought up and down from day to day.
Just try to make sure you only get on it at the same time and under the same
conditions, (eg., in the am before eating but after taking a dump, etc.).



rosie August 30th, 2004 03:04 PM

a pair of tight jeans works best for me!

--
rosie

"I think Senator Kerry should be proud of his record. No, I don't
think he lied."
.................................................. ...GEORGE W. BUSH
(8-25-04)

















"Larry S" wrote in message
...
: I have a 7 yr old electronic model that can range within 4 lbs,
when
: stepping on it four different times within a minute.
:
: Can anyone recommend a reasonably priced one for home use?
:
: Larry
:
: LC since 6/21/04
: 293/262.5/190
:
:
:
:



rosie August 30th, 2004 03:04 PM

a pair of tight jeans works best for me!

--
rosie

"I think Senator Kerry should be proud of his record. No, I don't
think he lied."
.................................................. ...GEORGE W. BUSH
(8-25-04)

















"Larry S" wrote in message
...
: I have a 7 yr old electronic model that can range within 4 lbs,
when
: stepping on it four different times within a minute.
:
: Can anyone recommend a reasonably priced one for home use?
:
: Larry
:
: LC since 6/21/04
: 293/262.5/190
:
:
:
:



Cubit August 30th, 2004 03:21 PM

I bought the scale at this link:
http://tinyurl.com/2rslp

I found it to be very accurate. It reads to the 10th of a pound. I love
it.


"Larry S" wrote in message
...
I have a 7 yr old electronic model that can range within 4 lbs, when
stepping on it four different times within a minute.

Can anyone recommend a reasonably priced one for home use?

Larry

LC since 6/21/04
293/262.5/190







Cubit August 30th, 2004 03:21 PM

I bought the scale at this link:
http://tinyurl.com/2rslp

I found it to be very accurate. It reads to the 10th of a pound. I love
it.


"Larry S" wrote in message
...
I have a 7 yr old electronic model that can range within 4 lbs, when
stepping on it four different times within a minute.

Can anyone recommend a reasonably priced one for home use?

Larry

LC since 6/21/04
293/262.5/190







Tarkus August 30th, 2004 03:40 PM

On 8/30/2004 3:52:52 AM, Larry S wrote:

I have a 7 yr old electronic model that can range within 4 lbs, when
stepping on it four different times within a minute.

Can anyone recommend a reasonably priced one for home use?


Not sure what you mean by reasonable. I have a Taylor digital scale.
Most of the time it never fluctuates between multiple readings, and at
most, it only fluctuates half a pound. I think it cost about $35-40.
--
LCing since 7/10/04 - 6'3" 230/220/190

Why does your nose run and your feet smell?

Cinnamn112 September 1st, 2004 12:59 AM

I just got one of the Tanita scales that includes a body fat percentage
monitor. I'm having fun with it. Its display reads to 0.2 pounds and 0.5%
bodyfat, which is far more precise than is really necessary, but if you are
the kind of person who isn't driven insane by daily fluctuations that should
not be a problem for you. I don't know what "reasonably priced" means to
you - the Tanita scales start at $35-40, I think, which is a bit more than a
no-frills scale, but is not stratospheric.


Oooh, I want a scale that measures body fat! I have no clue what I'm at, so
this would be a good investment. Where do you find Tanita scales?

Jen

Join my conga!
www.geocities.com/cinnamn112/ipodconga.htm

Cinnamn112 September 1st, 2004 12:59 AM

I just got one of the Tanita scales that includes a body fat percentage
monitor. I'm having fun with it. Its display reads to 0.2 pounds and 0.5%
bodyfat, which is far more precise than is really necessary, but if you are
the kind of person who isn't driven insane by daily fluctuations that should
not be a problem for you. I don't know what "reasonably priced" means to
you - the Tanita scales start at $35-40, I think, which is a bit more than a
no-frills scale, but is not stratospheric.


Oooh, I want a scale that measures body fat! I have no clue what I'm at, so
this would be a good investment. Where do you find Tanita scales?

Jen

Join my conga!
www.geocities.com/cinnamn112/ipodconga.htm

carla September 1st, 2004 03:09 AM

Cinnamn112 wrote:
I just got one of the Tanita scales that includes a body fat
percentage monitor. I'm having fun with it. Its display reads to
0.2 pounds and 0.5% bodyfat, which is far more precise than is
really necessary, but if you are the kind of person who isn't driven
insane by daily fluctuations that should not be a problem for you.
I don't know what "reasonably priced" means to you - the Tanita
scales start at $35-40, I think, which is a bit more than a
no-frills scale, but is not stratospheric.


Oooh, I want a scale that measures body fat! I have no clue what I'm
at, so this would be a good investment. Where do you find Tanita
scales?

www.tanita.com is a good place to start. :-) Also, I ordered mine from
amazon.com. So far it's been a lot of fun - though I am still learning the
daily fluctuations. I've only had it a week.

--
carla
http://geekofalltrades.typepad.com/geek



carla September 1st, 2004 03:09 AM

Cinnamn112 wrote:
I just got one of the Tanita scales that includes a body fat
percentage monitor. I'm having fun with it. Its display reads to
0.2 pounds and 0.5% bodyfat, which is far more precise than is
really necessary, but if you are the kind of person who isn't driven
insane by daily fluctuations that should not be a problem for you.
I don't know what "reasonably priced" means to you - the Tanita
scales start at $35-40, I think, which is a bit more than a
no-frills scale, but is not stratospheric.


Oooh, I want a scale that measures body fat! I have no clue what I'm
at, so this would be a good investment. Where do you find Tanita
scales?

www.tanita.com is a good place to start. :-) Also, I ordered mine from
amazon.com. So far it's been a lot of fun - though I am still learning the
daily fluctuations. I've only had it a week.

--
carla
http://geekofalltrades.typepad.com/geek



Roger Zoul September 1st, 2004 04:12 PM

Cinnamn112 wrote:
::: I just got one of the Tanita scales that includes a body fat
::: percentage monitor. I'm having fun with it. Its display reads to
::: 0.2 pounds and 0.5% bodyfat, which is far more precise than is
::: really necessary, but if you are the kind of person who isn't
::: driven insane by daily fluctuations that should not be a problem
::: for you. I don't know what "reasonably priced" means to you - the
::: Tanita scales start at $35-40, I think, which is a bit more than a
::: no-frills scale, but is not stratospheric.
:::
::
:: Oooh, I want a scale that measures body fat! I have no clue what
:: I'm at, so this would be a good investment. Where do you find
:: Tanita scales?

They are mostly useless. don't waste your money. Just look in the mirror.



Roger Zoul September 1st, 2004 04:12 PM

Cinnamn112 wrote:
::: I just got one of the Tanita scales that includes a body fat
::: percentage monitor. I'm having fun with it. Its display reads to
::: 0.2 pounds and 0.5% bodyfat, which is far more precise than is
::: really necessary, but if you are the kind of person who isn't
::: driven insane by daily fluctuations that should not be a problem
::: for you. I don't know what "reasonably priced" means to you - the
::: Tanita scales start at $35-40, I think, which is a bit more than a
::: no-frills scale, but is not stratospheric.
:::
::
:: Oooh, I want a scale that measures body fat! I have no clue what
:: I'm at, so this would be a good investment. Where do you find
:: Tanita scales?

They are mostly useless. don't waste your money. Just look in the mirror.



Bob in CT September 1st, 2004 04:22 PM

On Wed, 1 Sep 2004 11:12:56 -0400, Roger Zoul
wrote:

Cinnamn112 wrote:
::: I just got one of the Tanita scales that includes a body fat
::: percentage monitor. I'm having fun with it. Its display reads to
::: 0.2 pounds and 0.5% bodyfat, which is far more precise than is
::: really necessary, but if you are the kind of person who isn't
::: driven insane by daily fluctuations that should not be a problem
::: for you. I don't know what "reasonably priced" means to you - the
::: Tanita scales start at $35-40, I think, which is a bit more than a
::: no-frills scale, but is not stratospheric.
:::
::
:: Oooh, I want a scale that measures body fat! I have no clue what
:: I'm at, so this would be a good investment. Where do you find
:: Tanita scales?

They are mostly useless. don't waste your money. Just look in the
mirror.



They're good for telling you hydration level, though.

--
Bob in CT
Remove ".x" to reply

Bob in CT September 1st, 2004 04:22 PM

On Wed, 1 Sep 2004 11:12:56 -0400, Roger Zoul
wrote:

Cinnamn112 wrote:
::: I just got one of the Tanita scales that includes a body fat
::: percentage monitor. I'm having fun with it. Its display reads to
::: 0.2 pounds and 0.5% bodyfat, which is far more precise than is
::: really necessary, but if you are the kind of person who isn't
::: driven insane by daily fluctuations that should not be a problem
::: for you. I don't know what "reasonably priced" means to you - the
::: Tanita scales start at $35-40, I think, which is a bit more than a
::: no-frills scale, but is not stratospheric.
:::
::
:: Oooh, I want a scale that measures body fat! I have no clue what
:: I'm at, so this would be a good investment. Where do you find
:: Tanita scales?

They are mostly useless. don't waste your money. Just look in the
mirror.



They're good for telling you hydration level, though.

--
Bob in CT
Remove ".x" to reply

sprudil September 1st, 2004 08:44 PM


"Roger Zoul" wrote in message
...
Cinnamn112 wrote:
::: I just got one of the Tanita scales that includes a body fat
::: percentage monitor. I'm having fun with it. Its display reads to
::: 0.2 pounds and 0.5% bodyfat, which is far more precise than is
::: really necessary, but if you are the kind of person who isn't
::: driven insane by daily fluctuations that should not be a problem
::: for you. I don't know what "reasonably priced" means to you - the
::: Tanita scales start at $35-40, I think, which is a bit more than a
::: no-frills scale, but is not stratospheric.
:::
::
:: Oooh, I want a scale that measures body fat! I have no clue what
:: I'm at, so this would be a good investment. Where do you find
:: Tanita scales?

They are mostly useless. don't waste your money. Just look in the

mirror.

They work well for showing trends over time.

Sid...



sprudil September 1st, 2004 08:44 PM


"Roger Zoul" wrote in message
...
Cinnamn112 wrote:
::: I just got one of the Tanita scales that includes a body fat
::: percentage monitor. I'm having fun with it. Its display reads to
::: 0.2 pounds and 0.5% bodyfat, which is far more precise than is
::: really necessary, but if you are the kind of person who isn't
::: driven insane by daily fluctuations that should not be a problem
::: for you. I don't know what "reasonably priced" means to you - the
::: Tanita scales start at $35-40, I think, which is a bit more than a
::: no-frills scale, but is not stratospheric.
:::
::
:: Oooh, I want a scale that measures body fat! I have no clue what
:: I'm at, so this would be a good investment. Where do you find
:: Tanita scales?

They are mostly useless. don't waste your money. Just look in the

mirror.

They work well for showing trends over time.

Sid...



Bob in CT September 1st, 2004 08:56 PM

On Wed, 01 Sep 2004 19:44:41 GMT, sprudil wrote:


"Roger Zoul" wrote in message
...
Cinnamn112 wrote:
::: I just got one of the Tanita scales that includes a body fat
::: percentage monitor. I'm having fun with it. Its display reads to
::: 0.2 pounds and 0.5% bodyfat, which is far more precise than is
::: really necessary, but if you are the kind of person who isn't
::: driven insane by daily fluctuations that should not be a problem
::: for you. I don't know what "reasonably priced" means to you - the
::: Tanita scales start at $35-40, I think, which is a bit more than a
::: no-frills scale, but is not stratospheric.
:::
::
:: Oooh, I want a scale that measures body fat! I have no clue what
:: I'm at, so this would be a good investment. Where do you find
:: Tanita scales?

They are mostly useless. don't waste your money. Just look in the

mirror.

They work well for showing trends over time.

Sid...



They do, but you should definitely not get one if you'll be freaked out by
one-two percent bf variation per day. Also, if you have 3-4% variation in
one day, you're likely dehydrated.

--
Bob in CT
Remove ".x" to reply

Bob in CT September 1st, 2004 08:56 PM

On Wed, 01 Sep 2004 19:44:41 GMT, sprudil wrote:


"Roger Zoul" wrote in message
...
Cinnamn112 wrote:
::: I just got one of the Tanita scales that includes a body fat
::: percentage monitor. I'm having fun with it. Its display reads to
::: 0.2 pounds and 0.5% bodyfat, which is far more precise than is
::: really necessary, but if you are the kind of person who isn't
::: driven insane by daily fluctuations that should not be a problem
::: for you. I don't know what "reasonably priced" means to you - the
::: Tanita scales start at $35-40, I think, which is a bit more than a
::: no-frills scale, but is not stratospheric.
:::
::
:: Oooh, I want a scale that measures body fat! I have no clue what
:: I'm at, so this would be a good investment. Where do you find
:: Tanita scales?

They are mostly useless. don't waste your money. Just look in the

mirror.

They work well for showing trends over time.

Sid...



They do, but you should definitely not get one if you'll be freaked out by
one-two percent bf variation per day. Also, if you have 3-4% variation in
one day, you're likely dehydrated.

--
Bob in CT
Remove ".x" to reply

Rebecca September 1st, 2004 09:34 PM

Bob in CT wrote:




They do, but you should definitely not get one if you'll be freaked out
by one-two percent bf variation per day. Also, if you have 3-4%
variation in one day, you're likely dehydrated.


They will vary that much in a day because your reading does depend on
things like how hydrated you are, and people are generally more
dehydrated in the morning. Choose a time of day that you are going to
do the reading and then be consistent. And then don't get too worked up
about it. As someone else said, it's good for seeing trends, but not
terribly accurate objectively. That said, I have a Tanita and I like
it, and I think it does me some good to be able to monitor my body fat.

Have fun,
Rebecca


Rebecca September 1st, 2004 09:34 PM

Bob in CT wrote:




They do, but you should definitely not get one if you'll be freaked out
by one-two percent bf variation per day. Also, if you have 3-4%
variation in one day, you're likely dehydrated.


They will vary that much in a day because your reading does depend on
things like how hydrated you are, and people are generally more
dehydrated in the morning. Choose a time of day that you are going to
do the reading and then be consistent. And then don't get too worked up
about it. As someone else said, it's good for seeing trends, but not
terribly accurate objectively. That said, I have a Tanita and I like
it, and I think it does me some good to be able to monitor my body fat.

Have fun,
Rebecca


carla September 2nd, 2004 12:52 PM

Bob in CT wrote:
On Wed, 1 Sep 2004 11:12:56 -0400, Roger Zoul
wrote:

Cinnamn112 wrote:
I just got one of the Tanita scales that includes a body fat
percentage monitor. I'm having fun with it. Its display reads to
0.2 pounds and 0.5% bodyfat, which is far more precise than is
really necessary, but if you are the kind of person who isn't
driven insane by daily fluctuations that should not be a problem
for you. I don't know what "reasonably priced" means to you - the
Tanita scales start at $35-40, I think, which is a bit more than a
no-frills scale, but is not stratospheric.


Oooh, I want a scale that measures body fat! I have no clue what
I'm at, so this would be a good investment. Where do you find
Tanita scales?


They are mostly useless. don't waste your money. Just look in the
mirror.



They're good for telling you hydration level, though.

Well now, since I brought up the Tanita scales, let me try to defend my
purchase here.

I certainly see both of your points, Roger and Bob. To address Bob's point,
every measurement I take is taken when I wake up, before breakfast. That
means I am a bit dehydrated, which tends to elevate the body fat percentage
measurement. So that tells me two things: first, I know an approximate
upper limit on my body fat percentage, which is a nice thing to know since
it is now too high and I am trying to bring it down to a healthy level.
Sceond, I can observe long-term trends - the change in the reading over
time. Even if the reading itself is not terribly accurate due to systematic
errors like fluctuations in hydration levels, the delta over, say, a month
is still a useful piece of information. I would add one thing more, which
is that in the short time I have had the scale (a little over a week now,
admittedly a small sample) I have seen only very tiny fluctuations in the
measurement taken at that same time every morning - +/- 1%. This supports
my belief that measurements done at the same time of day can be useful for
comparing long-term changes in body fat percentage, if not absolute values.
(A nighttime measurement I did last night for curiosity differed from my
typical morning measurements by about 5% - so the important thing is for me
to be careful only to compare morning to morning.)

To address Roger's point: I think there are people who like to have
numbers, and people who are comfortable without them. I am a person who
likes to have them. There is nothing wrong with that so long as the
limitations of those numbers are understood. Your "just look in the mirror"
comment could apply equally well to weight measurements as to body fat
measurements - indeed, you may have intended it to - but for me, the
measurements provide a fun and motivating routine, as well as a satisfying
record of my progress. Looking in the mirror (which I also do, probably too
much - I can be quite vain!) does not have the same effect.

Here's how I am using my body fat scale: I get on it every morning - that's
just part of my routine - after peeing but before breakfast. I note the
weight (I might record it if I am in journaling mode, as I am right now) but
basically ignore the body fat measurement. Once a week I am recording the
weight and bodyfat measurements. After six or eight weeks I'm going to take
a look at that record and see how it looks. What I hope to get from this is
a rough look at the distribution of weight that I have lost in that period,
fat vs. LBM. This may be no more than a one significant digit
measurement - doesn't matter. I still expect it will be useful and
interesting, at that level. I will report back.

--
carla
http://geekofalltrades.typepad.com/geek




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