🔧 Measure with Confidence: Your Ultimate Force Gauge Awaits!
The BAOSHISHAN Digital Force Gauge is a versatile and precise tool designed for mechanics and educational purposes. With a maximum load capacity of 100N and an accuracy of ±1%, it features multiple measurement modes, customizable auto shutdown, limit alarms, and a minimum force shielding function, all packed in a portable case for convenience.
O**R
Perfect for science fair....superior in fact.
This little machine performed perfectly, and the handy heads for the unit and included hardware for mounting on a test rig made setup and use a breeze. Highly recommended for ease of use!
M**O
Capable Little Force Gage, Some Drift in Reading
This gage is good value for money. You probably want to mount it to something to get a steady reading. When you have it mounted and under a steady load, the reading will drift a bit with time. If the point of the exercise is the characterize the loads in a system, this doesn't matter. if you are trying to calibrate another device, you need something better.
G**A
Great for the price.
Accurate enough for my needs. For the price, you can't beat it.
K**D
Guage
Not for orthodontics
A**R
Awesome except for the threads of the adapters
Easy to use and good precision and repeatability. Only headache is the threads on the unit and the adapters are not very good. Most only thread on half way at best. Easy to chase the threads and retap with bottom taps. Just sad you need to do that.
D**L
Accurate enough for my needs
The digital force gauge is pretty accurate and easy to use. I don't have to measure force often so this gauge is a great value.
A**D
Great
I love that there isn't any perceived spring or movement on the gauge itself. It feels solid as a rock, yet it can still measure extremely tiny amounts of force.The threading for the adapters is a M6-1.0. Even if the included adapters aren't what you're looking for, you can easily make something that can accommodate your needs yourself. What they have is more than enough for what I'm looking for.The numbers are easy to read, and it has an arrow on the side to identify if it's measuring pull or push (in the even that that would be necessary). By default it shows the current output, but the peak button allows me to see the maximum measurement for a varying load. It has a settings button that allows me to set things like backlighting and max peak, but everything out of the box was the way I wanted it so I didn't really mess with it.The whole thing is fairly intuitive and easy to deal with. It's very accurate, and it comes with a certificate to prove it's readings.Overall a great gauge.Highly recommended.
P**N
A handy and inexpensive digital force meter
This is a solid force meter with a substantial capacity of up to 500 N or about 110 pounds. It is compact, sturdy and easy to hold, and comes with the accessories needed for both tension and compression measurements. A plastic carrying case is also included. Four M4 screw inserts are on the back to enable mounting it to a stand. I have no directly comparable device to evaluate accuracy but on the kg scale, it agreed with a calibrated electronic scale with a difference of about 0.5% using a 750 g mass which is in agreement with the stated accuracy of < 1%.The precision did not seem quite as good. Ten successive measurements in Peak mode of the force needed to depress a pipette plunger and zeroed after each measurement ranged from 10.3 to 11.6 with a coefficient of variation of about 4.2%. However, it is difficult to exactly duplicate the force application by hand and that might have been the primary contributor to variability. At any rate, a value within the range obtained in this case is good enough for my purposes.This is a useful tool and it is the least expensive force meter I have seen. It seems to be reliable and should function quite well for typical applications. There are a few aspects that I would change if I had the opportunity. For one, the character display for settings is relatively primitive and looks like an ancient LCD calculator. Some setting names formed from display bar segments are peculiar and their meaning is not always immediately obvious without reference to the manual. The display has a narrow vertical view angle and seems to disappear if you use it above or below the direct line of sight.There are several settings that can be entered although apparently not saved such as default ranges and the like, but accessing and using them is rather complicated. Although labeled Set, Peak, Zero and Unit, the buttons have multiple other functions such as to increment or decrement a value depending on what is being set. Reference to the manual and a lengthy flow chart description was needed to enter changes. However, the meter always defaults to direct, continuous mode, and the only options I ever use are setting the Peak function and zeroing which is simple. Units can also be changed easily.This meter seems intended to mainly be used while holding it and the shape is comfortable in hand. However, any measurements attempted with the device simply placed on a surface may suffer from the rounded bottom which allows it to rock in place. Using the attachment screws and a test stand would resolve that nicely although the stands are rather expensive. The meter has a time settable automatic shutoff to save the batteries, but this did not seem to work when in the Peak mode.Perhaps the feature I would most like to see is digital data output but that is something that is only available on much more expensive units. Overall, given its relatively low cost, this force meter provides a very useful tool and should be a good choice.
W**Y
Surprising fit and finish
I honestly expected this to feel very cheap, like a knockoff. But it feels exactly like all the very expensive specialty tools I used in engineering college. Works great, the case is nice, I have no issues!
S**N
A nifty measuring tool
At $90 this appears to be very good value for money.Tried it on a few things:-Measuring the force needed to move the bed of my 3D printer (measuring resistance of motion over the smooth rods),-Deflection of belt or strings as indication of tension. Not sure how precise this is, but by violin with octave strings requires higher force to deflect the string than for regular strings.-Force needed to open a filing cabinet drawer, etc...We got repeatable results, within half a Newton or better, just freehand without any jigs.In one case within +/-0.1N on pretty small forces around 4.5N (a pound of force).Weighing my 2kg reference weight in a 10g bag (hanging), we got 2.02kg, which is well within the 1% accuracy margin.The tool seems to do the essentials right.The case is nice. There's a couple tips for pushing (I used two for different applications) and a hook for pulling.It could use a bit of polish in a few details:I was fumbling installing batteries and realize there's a little ridge not quite in the right place that catches the battery when instead it should guide it to the right height. Not a big deal but preventable.It beeps loudly on most button presses (except when powering on for some reason). That gets a bit annoying when zero-ing and taking repeat measurements.The settings menu felt a bit awkward/confusing. There's a mixed bag in there,from things like alarms that you'd change frequently to stuff you're rather less likely to touch, like the gravity constant.Alarm setting is apparently doable only in Newton, and it then forgets what unit you had set it for.It also doesn't remember the unit you last used when turning it on.There's no feature to reverse the screen (would be convenient for hanging tests).The buttons are nicely stiff, but sometimes we had to press the off button more than once for it to take effect.The instructions assume familiarity with this sort of equipment, but I could use more details about the "minimum force shielding function" and exactly how the first peak mode works, etc.There's some sort of "calibration certificate" but it doesn't seem to say from whom: looks more like a stamp on a calibration test.This seems to do the basics right at a bargain price.Seems reliable enough.
E**K
Solidly built, relatively accurate, finicky interface
Most of this gauge's use has been for testing strength on certain 3d printed parts and a handful of magnets - for that purpose it's worked well, with relatively consistent results even at lower forces.Larger forces don't seem to be an issue from messing around with it either, but I have nothing for an exact comparison other than to say that a peak of certain pound ratings feel right.The various attachments are helpful and screw on easily. The main unit can be attached to a table or other surface if absolute accuracy is essential.Its only real flaw is how clunky changing any of the settings can be. It also forgets the units you selected, so unless you always want Newtons you'll have to cycle through them each time you turn it on.
Trustpilot
2 weeks ago
3 days ago