- Location
- Perth - Scotland
@Boydvalley - Happy to try and help.
In our experience, we come across a 1 bar system when a manufacturer has decided to focus on mobility of the system and integration into an existing system. Most of the time a 2 bar system is a standalone Weigh crate or something fixed in position, you can get brackets made up to move 2 bar systems about.
The reason we show all our weights down to 0.1KG is we wanted to keep our display options nice and simple. You can set some Tru-Test to weigh heads to focus down to 0.1KG if required. However, as default, they tend to go with the roundup or round down to 0.5KG as it covers the level of accuracy difference on the 1 bar system. The same would apply to us but we just don't round the numbers.
The more "Data Points" we have the more accurate we can be, so 2 bars are better than 1 when talking about complete accuracy. However, there is always a trade-off when it comes down to the flexibility of the complete system.
Hope that all makes some sense.
Ewen
In our experience, we come across a 1 bar system when a manufacturer has decided to focus on mobility of the system and integration into an existing system. Most of the time a 2 bar system is a standalone Weigh crate or something fixed in position, you can get brackets made up to move 2 bar systems about.
The reason we show all our weights down to 0.1KG is we wanted to keep our display options nice and simple. You can set some Tru-Test to weigh heads to focus down to 0.1KG if required. However, as default, they tend to go with the roundup or round down to 0.5KG as it covers the level of accuracy difference on the 1 bar system. The same would apply to us but we just don't round the numbers.
The more "Data Points" we have the more accurate we can be, so 2 bars are better than 1 when talking about complete accuracy. However, there is always a trade-off when it comes down to the flexibility of the complete system.
Hope that all makes some sense.
Ewen