Quote Originally Posted by patient4200
I would have to say I would DEMAND my product be weighed using TROY ounces..now that's a couple of extra sticks per bag eh?

Street lore or not, you need a very good calibrated scale..calibrated by weights and measures to get down to this level of precision..and if LO decides to give your bag a couple of squirts with an atomizer, it's all going to be a moot point anyway.

"Your honor..at the time the evidence was weighed the relative humidity was t 92%..since it's at 58% today, the weight is no longer accurate and we ask that you go with the weight of the material when the evidence was first weighed"
Have any of you who have bought from a dispensary seen a scale? Is the product in cases, premeasured and packaged?

If you did see a scale, did it have a calibration sticker from the Department of Weights and Measure?

Seems to me it would be proper for their scales to be calibrated and checked by the proper authority. After all, this is not like buying produce from the market. This is a much more valuable commodity than bananas. When you buy fuel for your car, you see a calibration sticker on the pump. This needs to be done for the measuring devices used by the dispensaries.

Perhaps this should be brought up in the next meeting of the MMJ board. :hippy:
pepurr Reviewed by pepurr on . gram vs ounce I'm a science person, so I work exclusively in metric. On the street an ounce is well know as 28.0 grams, when in reality one ounce is 28.3495 grams. most mass limits for the folks here is 6 ounces. 6 x 28.3495 = 170.097. On the street this is 6 oz x 28 g = 168g. This is only a difference of .3495 of a gram, which is enough to roll a nice fat joint. At 6 ounce with the true metric conversion, a gain of 2 grams are gained, about 6 fat joints. Now I have two questions about this. If you Rating: 5