8
6.1 [Power On/OFF]
Press the[On/OFF]button to turn on the balance. The display shows the message "ON".Then
themax.weighing range is displayed. The balance will carry out a self-test (F----1 to F----9). When the
"0.000 g" in display appears, the balance is ready for operation.
Press the [On/OFF] button and keep it pressed, until the display shows the message “OFF”. The balance will
switch off then.
6.2 TARE
When the pan is empty and indication is different than zero press [TARE] key.
Weighing with tare: Place the weighing box and press the[TARE] button. After standstill control the zero
display appears. The weight of the container is now internally saved. Weigh the material, the net weight will
be indicated. The weight of the weighing container will be displayed as a minus number after removing the
weighing container. The tare weight is saved until it is deleted. Remove the load from the balance and press
the [TARE] button. The tare procedure can be repeated as many times as necessary, for example with initial
weighing of several components for a mix (add-on weighing). The limit is reached when the total weighing
range capacity is full.
6.3 CAL - [ nternal Calibration]
The balance has an Internal calibration function.
6.4 UNIT- [multifunctional key]
The [UNIT] - button is a multi-function button.
6.4.1 Weighing unit selection [weighing mode]
Under the weighing mode, use the UNIT key to choose weighing units: g (gram), ct (carat), ozt (troy ounce),
oz (ounce), GN (gran), dwt (pennyweight) and mg (milligram)
1 g = 5 ct
= 0.032150747 ozt
= 0.035273962 oz
= 15.43235835 GN
= 1000mg (0.001g)
6.5 Print function [print mode]
The balance can be connected via the RS232C interface directly to a printer or PC.
Press the “PRINT” key to send the weight to the output device.
6.6 Pieces counting function [counting mode]
Before the balance can count parts, it must know the average part weight (i.e. reference). Proceed by putting
on a certain number of the parts to be counted. The balance determines the total weight and divides it by the
number of parts, the so-called reference quantity (1, 10, 20, 50, or 100). Counting is then carried out on the
basis of the calculated average piece weight.
As a rule: The higher the reference quantity the higher the counting exactness.