69427
The Artist formerly known as Turbo84
I acquired a couple free 1980 vintage digital hanging scales (1999# capacity) a while back in hopes of using them in the garage. To my dismay, neither worked when I got them. (Okay, yeah, what did I expect for free.) I had some e-mail correspondences with the manufacturer's tech support, but all I received were perplexed replies. Apparently their tech support personnel were hired well after 1980, as I had to convince the rep that they actually manufactured the item I had on my work bench. So, after a lot of wasted effort there, my next move was to spend a bunch of time tracing the internal pcb wiring, measuring internal voltages, and popping a lot of internal fuses. Between finding and repairing some parts issues, and thankfully having a duplicate set of circuit boards to compare readings, I got one of them working.

These scales use a hanging load cell transducer.

The main reason I've been wanting to get one of these scales working is to weigh the current BB engine in the '69, and compare it to the engine currently under construction on my engine stand. I can just hook the load cell to my engine hoist, and then hook the chains to the bottom of the load cell. I've always heard estimates of what BB engines weigh, but now I'm hoping to get an actual measurement.
However, now that I've got the scale functioning, I need to calibrate it. I'm trying to figure out some loads to put on it to calibrate it (I'm thinking of some five gallon buckets filled with sand, and then weighed at a scale company to get an accurate weight for these loads). Other than that, anyone have some better ways to do this?
Thanks for any help on this.
Mike

These scales use a hanging load cell transducer.

The main reason I've been wanting to get one of these scales working is to weigh the current BB engine in the '69, and compare it to the engine currently under construction on my engine stand. I can just hook the load cell to my engine hoist, and then hook the chains to the bottom of the load cell. I've always heard estimates of what BB engines weigh, but now I'm hoping to get an actual measurement.
However, now that I've got the scale functioning, I need to calibrate it. I'm trying to figure out some loads to put on it to calibrate it (I'm thinking of some five gallon buckets filled with sand, and then weighed at a scale company to get an accurate weight for these loads). Other than that, anyone have some better ways to do this?
Thanks for any help on this.
Mike