Well there is always the old fashioned style

I do not use a scale for mixing but when calibrating scales in years passed it was done with calibration weights and not a nickle because I believe coins are not an exact weight year to year.
1 - I use a 100g calibration weight to check periodically. My scale requires a 500g calibration weight to recalibrate it (that is the max weight for my scale).
2 - The percent it is off can increase exponentially the more weight is increased from what I understand. So at 50g it could be off 1 percent but at 100g it could be off 2 percent or more.
I checked mine today for the first time in a long time. It was under 0.03g. I didn't bother calibrating it again as that would mean having to read the instructions.Thanks, but I didn't think I gave any indication of calibrating with nickels. If it read that way, my wording was probably ambiguous.
My instructions say to calibrate with a 100g calibration weight. So if using that now and then to check, doing a calibration probably wouldn't be much more then pushing a button or two.
That sounds reasonable to me and if so, would also throw off a recipe to a degree. Based on that and the first part of your post, sure sounds like checking with the calibration weight on a somewhat regular basis is the best practice rather then waiting for something to seem off.
Thanks, Fozzy!
Personally I would still check it, e.g. with the calibration-weights, coins, or whatever... If the scale isn't precise anymore and semi-broken, then calibrating endlessly without checking for actual accuracy isn't giving you the full story
You are over thinking it. Your calculator should do percentages of flavoring and output the proper amounts in ML or g, like this:I want to start with mixing by weights but i can't get my mind of this ''problem'':
Lets' take one aroma is 0.95g/ml but you just use 1g so 1g=1,05ml.
For a mix you need 6g is 6x1,05ml= 6,3ml =5% more then actual needed.
After reading through another thread, a couple questions came to me about scale calibration. I'm not sure the specific scale is pertinent to the question, so just generally speaking for now:
1. How do you know your scale needs calibration? Is using a nickel or nickels known to be exactly 5 grams each placed on the scale before each session sufficient? Or just now and then or if you think it needs calibration? Or is there some other obvious indicator?
2. If your scale is "off", is it off a percentage or amount? Percentage being applied to any weight as in, off 10% (probably high, but easier calculation and explanation) so 1 gram reads 1.1 or .9 and 50 grams reads 55 or 45? For amount, off by 1 gram, so 1 gram reads 0 or 2 and 50 grams read 49 or 51? I'm assuming it would be consistent and not up, down, and all over the place.
3. And if that assumption (consistently wrong) is correct, does it really matter that the scale is off 1 gram/percent or 2 (mostly by percent)? In other words, if weighing short 1%, all ingredients would be short 1%, but actual ratios would be the same, but the total weight of the mix would be 1% short?
Maybe I am going overboard with my thinking, but after something else I read in another thread, wanted clarification on how frequently I should or need to calibrate and how to know when it is imperative to do so.
But since you use 1g for all your aroma's:
Yes that is the one solution to use the specified gravity's.
But if you don't you can have a big difference. Also when using other people's recipe. You don't know if they used 1 or the real specified gravity. Which imo can also change, so every new batch of aroma's has to be measured again.
Ok you can do this yourself using a calibrated syringe or digital syringe which are expensive, but to measure each aroma takes also a lot of your time and you have to clean to measure each aroma. Also you have to keep it in a log and take that log again when you want to mix. Is just not fool proof to me.
I think i stick to using the syringes, i think it takes a little more time and more mess and also more cost's over time. But i think it's also more fool proof and 300 syringes is about buying a scale. I have 150 flavours now. So 2x syringes for a flavor. I think i can use that for a year or 2. Oh and i am also aware of pulling up 1ml with a syringe can be 0,92ml, so in that way its less constant vs by weight mixing.