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Reviewed in the United States on March 10, 2025
Works great
Pinch
Reviewed in the United States on February 8, 2025
As a retired engineer, I understand what it means when a defective unit is inadvertantly delivered to a customer. Nobody wants that to happen but when it does, having an effective customer service capability moves the product manufacturing & logistical delivery operations closer to achieving Six Sigma performance levels.
Customer
Reviewed in the United States on September 10, 2024
Nice to see something so well made. But it does take some space.
Snapper
Reviewed in Canada on August 8, 2024
I liked that it is heavier, doesn't tip when you put your first foot on it.Great size and ample space for your feet on each side of the scale.Numbers are easy to read.
Dave S.
Reviewed in the United States on June 7, 2024
We like the size as it is large enough to actually stand on and be comfortable. We use this to weigh my wife as our digital scale will go to an error code while she is getting settled. It seems to be very well made and accurate. I would say I would buy again, however, I think it will last for a long time.
Mark Morris, LCSW
Reviewed in the United States on March 9, 2024
Big and stable, but bc it's dark, it's hard to read it very exactly. If you're okay within 2 or 3 lbs, it's fine though.
Jezus le Noble
Reviewed in the Netherlands on December 24, 2024
gaat maar tot 160 kg
Franz Hätscher
Reviewed in Germany on December 21, 2024
Schönes Designe, einfache Bedienung, komfortable Größe
Tina Chow
Reviewed in the United States on November 21, 2024
its stable and numbers are easy to be read. But overall the machines is kind of too bulky for me. So I returned it at the end.
ska
Reviewed in the United States on April 13, 2024
I brought this to replace a defective digital scale. When I stepped on it (after calibrating of course), I weighed almost 5 pounds lighter than I had 2 weeks before. Well! My husband also appears to have lost 5 pounds. Good news ... but we were suspicious, and eventually figured out that our new scale was not providing an accurate weight. Since we didn't have a second scale, we borrowed one and it measured both our weights 5 pounds heavier than our new mechanical scale. Just to be sure, we then bought a new digital scale and ... sure enough ... this scale weighs 5 pound light. The beauty of a mechanical scale is we can "calibrate" it to 5 pounds to compensate for the inaccuracy, but that sort of misses the point; we paid $45 because we wanted a scale that is accurate.
Norm H.
Reviewed in Australia on June 19, 2023
A little disappointed with the Bathroom Scales. It is solid enough and the display is large but seeing the smaller divisions from a height can be an issue if you don't have 20-20 vision. Most importantly the accuracy is questionable. I have checked my weight with 2 other digital scales and my Adamson A23 is approximately 3.1kg lower than it should be. This is easily compensated by setting the dial to 3.1kg instead of Zero. Obviously quality control is not great as quite a few others have experienced this same issue. The scale will still serve my purpose and give a rough guide to my weight without ever having to worry about batteries, but if you are wanting accuracy then this scale is not for you.
Cliente
Reviewed in Spain on January 28, 2023
Es una báscula bonita y fácil de usar, no necesita pilas, se calibra con una ruedecita fácilmente. Supongo que las habrá más precisas pero a mí para tener una idea del peso sin necesidad de una precisión absoluta pues me basta. Muy contenta con la compra
ScottoR
Reviewed in the United States on January 16, 2023
UPDATE: I've just been to the doctor's for a physical. Using this Adamson scale, my weight has been reading almost exactly 230lbs for the last month. Despite my negative review below I'd kept using it to at least have a general idea of tracking my weight. It's been consistent lately, but I'm glad I didn't update my original review to say that.My doctor's scale yesterday said 242lbs and when I got home, the Adamson insisted I was still 230.One of the two was clearly wrong -- doctors' offices usually have well-calibrated scales, so I was betting on that being correct. Just to be thorough and because I now needed a new scale anyways, I purchased another 2 relatively cheap digital ones. They both agreed withing a few decimals of 242. So this Adamson scale has been recently consistent, yet wildly inaccurate. Thought I'd lost about 20 lbs since writing the below review about 22 months ago; Turns out I've lost maybe 10. Could be worse, I guess. But if you're trying to lose weight, this shouldn't be the scale for you -- you want accuracy not flattery.Original review follows:I purchased this to replace a quite old digital scale that had a bad/hard to read display I'd been living with for years.Figured I'd go analog so I didn't have to worry about batteries or an iffy display.It feels solidly made, has a surface large enough for my size 13 hoofs, and is easy to read as specified in the marketing materials. Calibration using the wheel on the bottom is very easy.However, despite making sure it's calibrated each time immediately before using it, it seems to be very inaccurate. I can calibrate it, step onto it, and it'll read 258 Lbs. When I step off, it may go to zero, or it may go to plus or minus 2 pounds around zero. Re-calibrating it and stepping back on, it'll read something like 252 Lbs.Calibrating it and gently tapping the top with my foot can cause the needle to stop somewhere around the zero mark, again, plus or minus maybe 2 Lbs.According to this scale -- weighing myself in the morning before eating, etc. -- I lost 8 pounds in the last few days. Then I gained 4 pounds. Then I lost 5 pounds. And so forth.If you're tracking your weight in a spreadsheet over a long period of time, I'll bet the inaccuracy will average out fine in the long term. But just to casually keep track of my weight? Not so much.Also, I'm confused by the "d=2" on the face of the scale. I assumed that was the maximum deviation from a calibrated value (i.e. ±2Lbs), but it seems the "d" value is the scale's smallest displayed division according to the NIST. But this scale has 1 Lb divisions. Am I reading that wrong?At any rate, I just read through the description on here twice, and nowhere do they mention the accuracy of the scale. Which seems like a large omission, and something I should've noticed before buying. Maybe it is ±2 Lbs? But having a 4 pound window on a scale to measure humans seems kinda large to me.
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