| | |  | Scales | Home » » » » » Ww24w Weight Watchers Scale | | | | | | | Description: | | The weight watchers® by conair ww24w digital painted glass scale will make any bathroom look more appealing. the large digital face makes your weight easy to read.if you're looking for a simple, affordable and stylish option then this is the scale for you. | | | Features: | |
• Multiple-load cell technology
• Easy-to-read 1.3" digital display
• 400-lb. capacity
• "tap-on" scale activator; decorative painted glass
• 11.8" x 12.6" high-strength tempered safety-glass platform ; 0.1-lb. resolution
| | | Product Details: | | | Product Length:
| 2.13 inches | | Product Width:
| 14.75 inches | | Product Height:
| 14.0 inches | | Product Weight:
| 4.5 pounds | | Package Length:
| 14.5 inches | | Package Width:
| 14.0 inches | | Package Height:
| 2.0 inches | | Package Weight:
| 4.5 pounds | | Average Customer Rating:
| based on 15 reviews |
| | | | Customer Reviews: | |
Average Customer Review:
( 15 customer reviews )
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Most Helpful Customer Reviews
18 of 18 found the following review helpful:
False accuracy - it has a memoryNov 09, 2010
By Jennifer This scale appears to be accurate, but has one 'feature' that I hate. If you weigh yourself and you are approximately two pounds or less within your last weight, the scale will not register the difference. I don't see why this is a benefit. I find it aggravating. I suppose it's made for those people who would freak out over the normal variation of a couple of pounds but frankly I don't need or want this 'feature'. I have to weigh just my foot or something to get a vastly different reading, then I can weigh myself and get a REAL reading. When I see the same exact reading day after day it makes me think the scale is broken and when I started losing weight I could not figure out why I wasn't losing anything for a week or two and then suddenly my weight dropped by 2 to 3 pounds. It only added to my frustration. I know someone who has a different Weight Watchers scale that does the same thing. This is probably okay for maintenance, but not for losing weight - when you want to see accurate results.
9 of 11 found the following review helpful:
Memorizes weight to seem more accurateJun 27, 2010
By Douglas Hartwell
"Doug"
Here's the problem with this scale:
You get on it and it weighs you (seemingly pretty accurately). Each subsequent time you get on it, if it's even close to what you weighed the last time you were on it, it shows you the exact same value (to the 10th of a pound) that it had shown previously. In other words, if you weigh yourself, and an hour later you weigh yourself again, it will show you to be the exact same weight, not because it's that accurate, but because it wants you to think it is.
I've been losing a couple pounds a week for about 4 months, and weigh myself daily. What happens on this scale is it shows me at the same weight for a few days in a row, and then suddenly 2 pounds lighter.
While it appears this scale weighs accurately, the weight it displays is often a fabrication to seem even more accurate.
3 of 3 found the following review helpful:
Very DisappointedNov 21, 2011
By Loretta Klose I bought this model about 3 months ago. The batteries that came with it were dead when I received it. I bought and put new batteries in it. After about 2 months the scales started malfunctioning. I thought it was the batteries, bought new ones put them in. It worked ok off and on for another month or so. Yesterday it quit working again. I replaced the batteries with new ones once again. Nothing! Still wouldn't work. I called the company as it has a 10 year warranty. They would only replace it if I shipped it to them at my expense and enclose a check to ship a replacement back to me. By the time I paid shipping both to and from, I would have spent nearly the same amount that I paid for the scale to begin with. I will never buy from Conair again.
I also experienced the 2 lb memory. It was very frustrating to have to lose 2 lbs before the scale would register a loss. Accurate?? I don't think so!
2 of 2 found the following review helpful:
Tired of digital scales....Feb 28, 2012
By Rebecca V. Brink
"rex"
I'm having a problem with the 2 lb memory as well. It's discouraging! I know I'm not going to lose weight very quickly, but I had expected to see a natural fluctuation in my weight throughout the day and from day to day. I'm glad that the one reviewer found a way around it (weigh just your foot then weigh yourself again), but that's kind of a pain.
I don't actually think it's that accurate, either - I was 165.8 for weeks and weeks (during which I was weighed at 164.8 on a different scale), then one day it was suddenly 167.8, and frankly with the way I've been eating I don't know how I could have gained 2 lbs. But of course, with a scale that has a memory, it would be difficult to track, wouldn't it? A few days later I was down to 166.7 and it's been that way for a week. I don't know what's going on with this thing, the memory makes it confusing and it's very, very difficult for me to lose weight with it.
This is the kind of BS that makes me yearn for one of those scales that has a dial... Oh the good old days. At least you could see it working. Probably will go back to one of those when I have a few bucks to spare.
I'd say it's all right for the money, but honestly, just skip this scale, it's a hunk of garbage.
1 of 1 found the following review helpful:
remembers your weightMay 09, 2012
By Dot This scale remembers your weight from your previous weight in and often produces the exact same result if there hasn't been enough change. I have found a way to work around this by standing half way on the scale and weighing to reset and then getting all the way on.
This scale is very attractive and compact. The battery has lasted over a year. It has a high weight capacity.
See all 15 customer reviews on Amazon.com
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