Scale is less accurate than someone with calipers who knows what they're doing. It's sensitive to hydration, dry feet (impedes impulse), and the contents of your stomach/intestines. The upshot is that the scale is a hell of a lot easier to jump on every few days than trying to do the caliper thing.Originally posted by: Angrymarshmello
Scale. It sends an electric shock/pulse through your foot and gauges the time it takes to return iirc. The best way is by measuring it in water at a health club (I don't know exactly how it works but that's the absolute best way) Scale is next, with calipers a distant 3rd
Originally posted by: Fausto1
Scale is less accurate than someone with calipers who knows what they're doing. It's sensitive to hydration, dry feet (impedes impulse), and the contents of your stomach/intestines. The upshot is that the scale is a hell of a lot easier to jump on every few days than trying to do the caliper thing.Originally posted by: Angrymarshmello
Scale. It sends an electric shock/pulse through your foot and gauges the time it takes to return iirc. The best way is by measuring it in water at a health club (I don't know exactly how it works but that's the absolute best way) Scale is next, with calipers a distant 3rd
Originally posted by: Sephy
Get a regular caliper. More accurate. Not a digital kind.
Yup. The real advantage of the scale is that it allows you to easily track change in body fat over time (assuming you weigh/meaure yourself at the same time each day). If you go get a professional measurement at the outset to "zero" the readings obtained by the scale, you can extrapolate your actual body fat from there as it changes.Originally posted by: Moralpanic
Originally posted by: Fausto1
Scale is less accurate than someone with calipers who knows what they're doing. It's sensitive to hydration, dry feet (impedes impulse), and the contents of your stomach/intestines. The upshot is that the scale is a hell of a lot easier to jump on every few days than trying to do the caliper thing.Originally posted by: Angrymarshmello
Scale. It sends an electric shock/pulse through your foot and gauges the time it takes to return iirc. The best way is by measuring it in water at a health club (I don't know exactly how it works but that's the absolute best way) Scale is next, with calipers a distant 3rd
Also muscle density too. I work out, and it's always saying i'm 18% or so... when for a fact i know i'm not that high.
Originally posted by: aphex
Anyone know where i can get a relatively cheap scale that still works well?