Inside a smug drugglers secret scales
FULL TRANSCRIPT
At first glance, this may look like a
car remote control key fob, but in
reality, it's actually a disguised set
of micro weighing scales, presumably for
measuring very expensive powders and
resins in the street, but also for
spontaneous measuring of the weight of
jewelry and carrots. Now, let me zoom
down in this and I'll show you how it
operates.
So to turn it on, you press this button
here. It also acts as the tear button. T
A R E. That actually supposeding you had
a 10 g weight in it. If you press tear,
it will remove that from the weight so
that any future weights will be based on
minus 10 g. Um I'll tear that back to
zero. We've also got the M button which
selects between the various uh units it
can weigh in, including um carrot and
ounce.
But as it is, let's pop the weights on.
Oh, before I do that, I'll just show you
that it's got a much darker display when
viewed from the front angle than it does
directly from above. It looks quite dim
on the camera, but that's okay. So, I'm
just going to zero that and then press a
50 g weight on. And it shows the 50 g. A
20 g weight shows suspiciously accurate
20 grams.
A 10 g weight shows an equally accurate
10 g and a 5 g weight shows 4.99 which
then corrects itself conveniently to 5
g. I get the feeling it's just, you
know, cheating a bit for these
calibration. However, should you ever
have to actually calibrate it, here's
how you do it. Press down both the
buttons together and after a while it
will display well it's displaying five
here but you can switch through. So it
can be it's capable of doing very
accurate measurements apparently. You
can calibrate to 1 g, 200 g, 100 g, 50
g, 20 g, 10 g, 6 5 or 1 g. So, I'm going
to go to the 50 g option and then press
um I'm having to hold it still here. It
goes into calibration mode, flashes the
50 show to show that it wants the 50 g
weight. You place the 50 g weight on.
It pauses, it says pass, and now it's
displaying the weight of the weight.
Excellent. So, you could actually
miscalibrate it if you so desired. But
anyway, the bit we're really interested
in is what's inside. You see a typical
load cell is like this. It's a bit of
metal in this case it's an aluminium
alloy and it's supported at one end and
then you apply weight downwards at the
other end and by the measuring the
distortion of two load uh strain gauges
either side well four actually it gets a
measurement and another option for that
is this which is a weighing scale foot
which is a it's supported at the side
and when you stand in the scales it
pushes this central steel bit up and
deflects it and it can measure that. But
how are they doing it in such a small
space in this? Especially when you've
already got some of the space taken by a
battery in the back here, which is a
2032. So, there's not really an awful
lot much space left. I can already see
the load cell in there. So, let's uh
unscrew this. I'll just stay zoomed in,
even if it is probably going to be super
potato vision at this distance.
So, here's one screw.
Hoping that this hinge is open. Oh,
maybe there's another screw underneath
that quantity control sticker at the
back. Hold on. I'll soon find out. I
shall rub the quality control sticker.
Anything underneath? No, there's nothing
underneath it. Excellent.
So, let's get that screw out. Push these
to the side. And then I presume it's
clipped together as well. Where is my
spudger? There's a spudger.
This is where it never weighs accurately
again after this.
Right.
So, the circuit board does everything on
it and it's just got a how many wires
are going out to the load cell? It's got
four wires going out to the load cell,
which is fairly normal. Right, there's a
couple more screws I can take out here.
And then I'll take a picture. But to be
honest, what we're going to see here,
we're going to see the LD LCD display
and a blob chip. Maybe a dedicated um
load uh sensor load cell chip because it
is quite a specialist thing.
So, this comes off,
right?
And I'm guessing now that if I undo
these screws, the load cell is going to
come out the front of the unit
on the platin.
I'll just slide these wires. They've
tied them. No, they've just twisted
them. Right. I tell you what, let's uh
untwist them
and we'll thread that through. So, there
it is. It's a tiny It's literally It's a
miniature version of this. It's just
this tiny tiny little load cell with the
anchor point at this side from the base
and then the platin attached at one end,
the the other end here. And it's only
got
Oh, no. It's It's got both. It's
actually got them on both sides of that.
That's really interesting. Okay, what do
we have for the display? I think the
display might be still in the unit. Is
it? The display is There's the LCD
display in the zebra strip. Here is the
backlight. I wonder what the little red
wires were for. What's the circuitry?
Oh, right. Tell you what, there's not
really much to see. I'll take a picture
of it of it and show you what it looks
like.
So, I'm guessing this is based on a
dedicated chip. There's so few support
components. It may have some element of
programmability, but I think it may just
go out as it is with a standard LCD
driver on board preconfigured as a set
of weighing scales. The only resistor in
this whole circuit board is the 47 ohm
resistor for the backlight. Um, we've
got a couple of buttons pulling down to
the 0 volt rail. We've got some supply
filtering capacitors. And this one is
connected between the incoming positive
from the uh CR 2032 lithium cell and the
0 volts. And this one is also referenced
to 0 volts. I'm guessing there's an
internal voltage reference. These two
capacitors seem to the connections going
straight under this blob where the chip
is. And the signals that come in from
the uh strain gauges actually just go
straight into the chip. So really
there's not much to explore here. It is
ultimately just a mass- prodduced and
dedicated unit. And incidentally, I did
uh put it all back together afterwards.
And
it still
reads accurately.
Very neat. I love the little tiny load
cell. Here, I'll give you a zoom up of
the load cell. Look, here's the big one.
That's literally what it looks like
inside there. Complete with a pairs of
holes at the end and the little strain
gauges mount to the side, but so much
tinier. Very neat. I like that. So,
there we have it. Um, what's inside your
local neighborhood
dealer, jewelry dealer obviously, inside
their scales? And the answer is, um, not
much. It's just amazing that they've
crammed it into such a small space. Now,
one thing worth mentioning is that when
I was putting this back together again,
I did notice the most critical bit here
was uh, aligning the plate up because as
you tighten the screws, it can take
random positions. I think in the factory
they probably have a little cup that
sits around this just to hold in
alignment and in position while they
screw it in. And the wires, I like the
way that they basically they've got long
wires that are tacked to the circuit
board, but then they just scrunch up the
residual amount on both the backlight
and the uh the load cell and they just
stuff them into little channels for
them. Very neat. Very strangely,
bizarrely simple, but ultimately when
you know how it works, it's really not
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