It's hard to believe that a fine balance has to have a digital display of the price. If this is true also the quality, then it is a direct hit. There seem to be the case. The scale, experts say probably lower shell Wage to the measures at rest no more than 7 x 11 cm and 2 cm scarce is high, even fits into a shirt pocket. With 125 g own weight it is still in the classic phone range. A leatherette protective cover is one of them, as a 100g calibration weight in the appropriate plastic container. The scale works is like a box, and the 6 x 6 cm Weighing table made from stainless steel and the easy to read display with its touch screen functions for putting, calibrate and adjust the desired weight unit (grams, as well as an ounce and carats) are accessible. The cogiven instructions well informed about everything Wichtge. Two AAA batteries are needed for operation, they are also in. The maximum load capacity of the scale is 300 g, readable up to the second decimal place, so far as the 10-milligram range. I have not done any test series to precision and reproducibility of the display, and not whether the measuring range over the entire width of scales is completely linear, one should not exaggerate. But, as with any other scale well to heed the truism, namely not to perform the weighing in draughty air, is always right! My conclusion: For weighing coins, jewelry and other "odds and ends" the "little thing" of fine scale is allerbestens suitable. I would recommend it absolutely. Maybe I'm building me a Dichtebstimmungsgerät it - Archimedes had it before good two thousand years is not so easy!