gram weights

Thomas D. Seay, III t.seay@mail.utexas.edu
Wed Nov 4 16:04 MST 1998


>--- You wrote:
>One question - how do you measure 45g, 47g, 49g, 51g if you only have even
>numbered weights, i.e. 12g, 14g, 16g, 18g, 20g, etc.? Am I missing
>something?
>--- end of quote ---
>
>2-gram increments are all I need:  for example, if 48g is too little but
>50g is too much, then I know the weight is 49g.  I have found that this
>"go- no go" system works very fast.
>
>Danny Dover
>Dartmouth College
>Hanover, NH

Thanks for the clarification.

Tom Seay
UT Austin





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