Quote Originally Posted by pepurr
The measure is what they will use for sentencing guidelines.

Perhaps I misunderstand your meaning. :stoned:
And therefore they will use equipment calibrated to that measure.
If the law states so many ounces they will measure using equipment calibrated to measure ounces and not grammes.

In this day and age of technological design most good scales will switch from one measure to another at the push of a button, I myself have scales suitable for 4 different measures.

The type of measure is only relevant if it must be converted, but once again the standard is set so a conversion would be a very simple equation.

x amount of grammes being equal to x amount of ounces and visa versa.
psychocat Reviewed by psychocat 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