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Rice Lake 12511 Stainless Steel Cylindrical Metric Individual Test Weight, 500g Mass, NIST Class F

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$77.54

$ 37 .99 $37.99

In Stock

1.Size:10g


  • Metric, cylindrical, type-II weight with sealing cavity for adjusting overall weight
  • Stainless steel construction for stability, resistance to corrosion, and low magnetic susceptibility
  • Meets National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST) Class F specification for commercial "Legal-for-Trade" weighing operations
  • Weights 100g and over have a sealing cavity for adjusting total weight


The Rice Lake metric, cylindrical, type-II test weight is constructed of stainless steel, meets National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST) Class F certifications, has a 7.84 density, and a sealing cavity for adjusting the overall weight. The weight is constructed of stainless steel for stability, resistance to corrosion, and low magnetic susceptibility. Weights 100g and over have a sealing cavity for adjusting the overall weight. The weight meets NIST Class F specification for commercial "Legal-for-Trade" weighing operations often required by state and local weights and measures officials, device installers and service technicians. Class F weights can be used to test the accuracy of most Class III scales, all scales of Class III L or IIII, and scales not marked with a class designation. NIST Class F weights are manufactured to specifications of NIST HB-105-1.

Calibration weights are used to measure the weight or mass of an object using a balance or scale, or to calibrate other weights or instruments. Calibration weights can be certified or uncertified. Certified weights meet strict guidelines for accuracy and can usually be recertified. Certified weights are used in labs where a high degree of accuracy and repeatability is required. Uncertified weights are used where a lower degree of accuracy is required, including student laboratories, rough weighting operations, and measuring force. Hooked and slotted weights are often used to measure pressure, torque, and tensile strength, and to demonstrate basic laws of physics. Calibration weights differ from lab weights, which are general purpose weights used to hold an object in place, similar to a paperweight.

Science education products incorporate applied math and science principles into classroom projects. Teachers in pre-K, elementary, and secondary classrooms use science education kits and products alongside science, technology, engineering, and math (STEM) curriculum to demonstrate STEM concepts and real-world applications through hands-on activities. Science education projects include a broad range of activities, such as practical experiments in engineering, aeronautics, robotics, energy, chemistry, physics, biology, and geology.

Rice Lake Weighing Systems manufactures weight-related and process-control equipment for use in research, scientific, and quality control labs. The company, which was founded in 1946 and is headquartered in Rice Lake, WI, meets International Organization for Standardization (ISO) 9001:2008 standards, and is accredited by the National Voluntary Laboratory Accreditation Program (NVLAP) to ISO/IEC 17025:2005.


Customer
2025-09-04 10:15:38
Wish it included certificate but has been instrumental in verifying balance in lower range.Looking forward when their ASTM class 1 weights become available.
R69512
2025-07-28 11:32:04
As the title says this calibration weight is 2.2grams overweight. I ended up drilling out 2.2 grams.
Placeholder
2025-07-27 12:30:20
No certificate ? then it is NOT "NIST traceable' and is useless.I should return it.
R. Burns
2025-06-12 12:28:04
No cert, how is this tracible to NIST?
Joyce Harvey
2025-03-13 18:03:37
Pour équilibrer les pèse-bébé, c'est inestimable!
Koshchey
2025-01-04 15:38:42
It does not come with a Certificate of Analysis, which is the most critical info needed so that I know which number and to however many decimal places that the balance should be reading back to me.For example, a 2 g weight may be certified as "1.997710 g" and this would fall into a certain tolerance which the manufacturer specifies - in my example, then[(2.000000 g - 1.997710 g) / (1.997710 g)]*100% = 0.115 %There would be a 0.115 % relative difference between the theoretical value and the actual manufactured item.So for me this 1 kg calibration weight which I purchased is OK for what I call "information purposes" but I can't use this to sign off that my balance is calibrated properly as I had hoped.I am still keeping it and I will borrow someone else's validated and documented weight to validate mine but maybe I would like to purchase a significantly more expensive product later - such as a Class A calibration mass but that could run up to 10x the price as this one.