Hey everyone, I just spent my day doing a little experiment with my digital scale and thought I’d share my process and findings. I needed a digital scale conversion chart. I wanted to make sure I had accurate conversions for my kitchen digital scale.
First, I grabbed my digital scale from the kitchen. These things are super common nowadays, and they’re pretty handy for cooking and baking. I needed to create a conversion chart because sometimes recipes use different units, and I hate the guesswork. I needed quick conversions between milligrams, grams, ounces, pounds, and kilograms.

So, I started by weighing myself. Then, I stepped off the scale, picked up a dumbbell, and stepped back on. This was just to make sure the scale was working properly and to get a feel for how it displays different weights.
Next, I decided to gather a few items with known weights. I used some standard weights I had lying around, and I also used some packaged foods with clearly marked weights in grams and ounces. I also needed the standard metric conversion chart template to convert small, medium, and large-scale weight conversions from metric to English system. I wanted to test the accuracy of my digital scale’s readings.
Then came the fun part. I started placing each item on the scale and noting down the readings. I made sure to switch the scale between different units like grams, ounces, and pounds to see how the readings changed. I recorded everything meticulously.
After weighing everything, I started comparing the scale’s readings with the known weights or the weights mentioned on the packaging. I also cross-referenced these with some online weight conversion calculators, just to be extra sure. I found some online resources that gave conversions for milligrams, grams, ounces, pounds, kilograms, and even some more obscure units like carats, grains, mommes, newtons, and ticals. I primarily used one that let me input the weight and select the original unit. Then, I could choose the unit I wanted to convert to and get an instant result.
I compiled all my findings into a simple chart. Here’s a snippet of what I came up with:
- Digital Scale Reading: 0.1 Ounce Equivalent: 2
- Digital Scale Reading: 0.2 Ounce Equivalent: 3
- Digital Scale Reading: 0.3 Ounce Equivalent: 5
- Digital Scale Reading: 0.4 Ounce Equivalent: 6
- Digital Scale Reading: 0.5 Ounce Equivalent: 8
- Digital Scale Reading: 0.6 Ounce Equivalent: 10
- Digital Scale Reading: 0.7 Ounce Equivalent: 11
- Digital Scale Reading: 0.8 Ounce Equivalent: 13
- Digital Scale Reading: 0.9 Ounce Equivalent: 14
It was a bit of a tedious process, but now I have a handy digital scale conversion chart that I can refer to whenever I need it. It’ll definitely make my cooking and baking a lot easier. Hopefully, this little experiment of mine will be helpful to some of you out there. Accurate weight conversions are essential for precise cooking and baking. Now I can get quick and accurate results for my kitchen adventures!