The scale is used to measure weight. Weight is force, specifically, the magnitude
of the gravitational force of attraction between two masses. So the scale can be
marked in any unit of force, such as pounds, newtons, stone, etc. It will read
correctly wherever it's used.
Also, if at the time of manufacture, it is known what planet the scale will be used
on, and the acceleration of gravity on that planet is known, then as long as the
scale is not taken to another planet, every force it measures reveals the mass of
the object being weighed, and it could even be marked in units of mass, such as
kilograms.
Depending on its size and if it is metric it would be grams, milligrams or kilograms. If it is imperial pounds and ounces.
A measure of force but the specific unit depends on the setup of the machine. Could be newtons, kilograms, or pounds, to name a few.
It depends how large it is and what the maxium weight is that it can measure. I have two spring balances, one in ounces and the other in pounds.
A Newton (N), the unit for force. One Newton is equivalent to 1kg * m / s^2, or mass * acceleration.
It measures weight but it is usually graduated to give measures of mass.
Spring scale is used to measure a mass.
This is not an accurate instrument and must be avoided for trade.
It depends what you're measuring. For example, if you're measuring distance, the SI unit used is the metre.
Celsius is not an SI unit. The SI unit for temperature is Kelvin (K). This has the same scale as Celsius, the difference is 0 K is absolute zero and not the temperature of iced water. 0 K equals -273.15C
There is none. Fahrenheit is not an SI unit.
Kilo = 1,000 times the base unit Abbreviation = K Here is a link for all of the SI Prefixes and their decimal, short scale, long scale, and prefix as well as the symbol of abbreviation : http://.en.wikipedia.org/wiki/SI_prefix Hope this helped!
No, meter is the SI unit of Length, Si unit of volume is meter3.
The answer depends on the scale but the SI unit is a metre.
The scale used is usually Celsius or Kelvin.AnswerThe SI unit of temperature is the kelvin (K). Celsius is a metric unit, but not an SI unit, although it may be 'used alongside' the SI system.
The official SI unit for temperature is Celsius. The symbol is °C.
It depends what you're measuring. For example, if you're measuring distance, the SI unit used is the metre.
The unit used on spring scales is 'Newtons.'
Spring scales can measure grams, newtons, or pounds.
It is Newtons per metre.
Ounces or Grams
Probably a kilogram.
A newton metre is the SI unit for torque, symbol Nm, and is also technically equivalent to the joule. A newton meter is a term sometimes used to reference a spring scale, which uses a spring and Hooke's law to measure the force exerted in a linear direction. For purposes of avoiding confusion, using the term 'spring scale' is better.
Weight (Newtons or pounds).
It measures by using newtons.