Adamson A24 scale for body weight (analog, 350 lb) with anti-skid surface vs Adamson A25 Mechanical Bathroom Scale
Overall winner: Adamson A24 scale for body weight (analog, 350 lb) with anti-skid surface
Key Differences
Choose A25 (A) if you want a more affordable analog mechanical scale with an anti-skid rubber surface and a high-precision analog dial; it’s praised for not needing batteries but has some reports of small number readability and occasional large accuracy errors. Choose A24 (B) if you prefer a larger, high-contrast dashboard and are willing to pay a higher price tier; it also has anti-skid surface and no batteries but reviewers note inconsistent readings and calibration drift
Adamson A24 scale for body weight (analog, 350 lb) with anti-skid surface
Mechanical bathroom scale with large, high-contrast numbers and anti-skid rubber surface. Easy, no batteries; measures up to 350 lb. Customer feedback notes sturdy build and easy-to-read display, with mixed opinions on accuracy
Pros
- anti-skid rubber surface
- large, high-contrast numbers
- no batteries required
- sturdy build
Cons
- mixed accuracy and inconsistent readings according to customers
- some concerns about calibration and sensitivity
- size of numbers/applicable to user preference may vary
Adamson A25 Mechanical Bathroom Scale
Mechanical bathroom scale with 400 lb capacity and 5.3 in dial on a textured 12.4 x 10.2 in platform. No batteries needed, anti-skid surface for stability. Customers note reliable readings and solid build, with readability being mixed
Pros
- anti-skid rubber surface
- no batteries required
- high-precision analog dial
- large platform for stable footing
Cons
- readability of numbers can be small
- some readings vary compared to actual weight
- limited to pounds only
Head-to-Head
| Criteria | Winner |
|---|---|
| Price | Adamson |
| Durability | Tie |
| Versatility | Adamson |
| User Reviews | Adamson |