connor02 said:
The common bathroom scale does not divide by 9.81. It shows N. And for someone standing on the scale, this is the person's weight.
Nonsense. Google "bathroom scale Newton" and you will see a bunch of physics homework questions, some right here at this site, but nothing to buy. To find a bathroom scale that displays a metric result you need to google "bathroom scale metric", "bathroom scale kg", or "bathroom scale kilograms" -- and those scales will display your "weight" in kilograms, not Newtons.
darkxponent said:
The scale shows niether weight nor mass. It gives the value N/9.8. Where N is the normal.
That's much closer to the mark.
What a bathroom scale measures is the displacement of a spring. A scale that registered spring displacement, however, would be absolutely worthless. "Oh! I only weight 1.2 millimeters today!"
If the scale is analog, the displacement of the spring rotates a dial. The scale under the dial will inevitably have units of mass (kg or lb). This will be off if the zero point is not right (which it isn't), if the spring doesn't exactly obey Hooke's law (which it doesn't), if the spring is a little stiffer or spongy than nominal (which it is), if gravitational acceleration is something other than 9.80665 m/s
2 (which it is), if the load isn't perfectly distributed on the spring pan (which it isn't), ...
A digital scale removes the zero point problem but adds even more sources for error. Instead of rotating a dial, a digital spring uses something such as a strain gauge to convert pressure to an electrical signal, and an A/D converter to convert this electrical signal to a number. Now the strain gauge can be non-linear, have a scale factor error, have a bias, as can the A/D converter.