The 20 milligram weight would be the weight of a 100 kg person if they were freely floating in space at a one Earth-Moon distance from the Moon. But, and a big but - but because the Earth is 'supporting' them when the Moon is overhead, although the Moon would pull them and lighten the apparent weight, it also pulls the Earth under which 'pushes' up against them increasing the weight that same 20 milligrams to offset the weight difference. I.e, when you are on the surface of a mass coupled to another body through gravitation, the only body that matters is the one you are on. The apparent gravitational pull of the distant object is not measurable. My bad. So this is not a variable that affects the measured weight on the scales. They are not affected by the Sun and Moon, to a first approximation (though there is a curious tiny difference for a different reason). Lucky, because if this were not the case the Sun would cause a +/- two ounce weight difference for the same reason for the 100 kg mass person; the two ounces corresponds to their weight if they were freely floating at 1 AU from the Sun. I thunk.

Best wishes
Doug


-----Original Message-----
From: MexicoDoug <mexicod...@aim.com>
To: vs.petrov...@gmail.com; Meteorite-list@meteoritecentral.com
Sent: Fri, Jul 1, 2011 7:28 pm
Subject: Re: [meteorite-list] Micromounts and weights - Standards Vary


PS, 
 
Just for fun, 
 
If anyone asks you how much you weigh "on" the Moon, tell them 20 milligrams. At least if you are a 100 kg person (10 mg featherw....errrr...bessyweight for a 50 kg person), if I haven't forgotten to square something somewhere. 
 
For the sinister sellers on eBay who wait to weigh their micros when the Moon directly underhead, their 100 kg specimens can be up to 41 mg heavier by pulling that trick! 
 
Best wishes 
 
-----Original Message----- 
From: MexicoDoug <mexicod...@aim.com> 
To: vs.petrov...@gmail.com; Meteorite-list@meteoritecentral.com 
Sent: Fri, Jul 1, 2011 6:43 pm 
Subject: Re: [meteorite-list] Micromounts and weights - Standards Vary 
 
"If you measuring such a small thing on the same kind of spring scale at the sea level and at 500m above the sea level, the scale will show you a different result. Simple example:"  
  
Hi Sergey,  
  
I think you want to clarify that. If you try to measure something that weighs 0.001 grams ( 1 mg ) at sea level vs. 500 meters higher, it will weigh 251 ng (nanograms) less, but still 1.000 mg = 0.99975 mg. That is not detectable by any conventional scale and other external factors like differences in air density, air saturation, convection, not to mention people walking around nearby, etc. will swamp the difference, not to mention the porosity of the sample itself which is a problem for even the regular fare.  
  
But - I think you meant trying to weigh something with the precision of 1 mg for macro sized samples is very difficult. In the case of a ten gram sample the 251 nanograms becomes 2.5 milligrams of difference, and you are right!  
  
Kindest wishes  
Doug  
  
  
  
-----Original Message-----  
From: Sergey Vasiliev <vs.petrov...@gmail.com>  
To: Michael Blood <mlbl...@cox.net>; Met. Mike Bandli <fuzzf...@comcast.net>; 'Michael Farmer' <m...@meteoriteguy.com>  
Cc: Meteorite List <meteorite-list@meteoritecentral.com>  
Sent: Fri, Jul 1, 2011 5:24 pm  
Subject: Re: [meteorite-list] Micromounts and weights - Standards Vary  
  
Hi All,  
  
Actually I always thought that trying to measure something like 0.001g is  
very difficult.  
If you measuring such a small thing on the same kind of spring scale at the  
sea level and at 500m above the sea level, the scale will show you a  
different result.  
Simple example:  
http://www.edinformatics.com/math_science/mass_weight.htm  
  
Best,  
Sergey  
  
  
-----Original Message-----  
From: meteorite-list-boun...@meteoritecentral.com  
[mailto:meteorite-list-boun...@meteoritecentral.com]On Behalf Of Michael  
Blood  
Sent: Friday, July 01, 2011 11:03 PM  
To: Met. Mike Bandli; 'Michael Farmer'  
Cc: Meteorite List  
Subject: Re: [meteorite-list] Micromounts and weights - Standards Vary  
  
Mike,  
I checked this out and was confused. The first statement:  
" METTLER TOLEDO AT261 0.01mg Counting Scale in HardCase"  
Implies accuracy down to a tenth of one mg! That is .0001g  
HOWEVER, the first part of the description reads:  
Weighing Capacity:205g Repeatability:(0-50g)+/-0.015mg  
Linearity:(10g)+/-0.03mg Stabilization:(typical)8-12sec  
What the h*** does that mean? It sounds like a maximum  
Capacity of 205g, but "repeatability:(0-50g)+/- 0.015" seams  
Like it is saying it can be off by 15mg!  
THEN: "Linearity:(10)+/- 0.03mg Stabilization..." sounds  
Like they are saying it could be off by 30mg.  
How do others read this?  
Michael  
  
On 6/30/11 5:11 PM, "Met. Mike Bandli" <fuzzf...@comcast.net> wrote:  
  
Yes, and for those serious about weights, I would highly recommend a  
refurbished Mettler unit similar to this one:  
  
http://tinyurl.com/3dz8udc  
  
  
----------------------------------------------  
Mike Bandli  
Historic Meteorites  
www.HistoricMeteorites.com  
and join us on Facebook:  
www.facebook.com/Meteorites1  
IMCA #5765  
-----------------------------------------------  
  
  
-----Original Message-----  
From: Michael Farmer [mailto:m...@meteoriteguy.com]  
Sent: Thursday, June 30, 2011 4:55 PM  
To: Mike Bandli  
Cc: Michael Gilmer; Meteorite List  
Subject: Re: [meteorite-list] Micromounts and weights - Standards
Vary  
  
I use a multi-thousand dollar scale, you are right about the cheap
scales,  
have bought several for the field, they are worthless.  
Wanna sell the small stuff, make the investment to do it right.  
  
Michael Farmer  
  
Sent from my iPad  
  
On Jun 30, 2011, at 4:52 PM, "Mike Bandli" <fuzzf...@comcast.net>
wrote:  
  
A little perspective on milligrams:  
  
There are a lot of meteorite mg weights out there that not accurate.
We  
can  
thank these new, cheap Chinese digital scales that promise
accuracies of  
+/-  
1mg or less, which are a complete joke. I bought one in Tucson to
test it  
out against my high-end calibrated machine and it was off by about
10 mg  
on  
average for pieces 50 to 100 mg and 5 mg on average for pieces 10 to
50  
mg.  
Anything fewer than 10 mg - forget about it. The calibration weights
it  
came  
with were even more laughable...  
  
In reality, in order to be able to accurately measure mg, you need
a  
machine  
that has been recently leveled and calibrated in-situ. I have a
recently  
leveled/calibrated mechanical scale whose tare changes by the hour
due to  
changes in the weather. It even picks up the subtle vibration of
the  
dishwasher downstairs.  
  
Bottom line - a $100 mg scale isn't going to get you the accuracy
needed  
to  
accurately measure true mg. Since most people can't afford the
hundreds  
to  
thousands it costs for an accurate mg scale, I don't expect most mg  
weights  
advertised to be truly accurate. They're close...  
  
Just my 2 mg worth (+/- 1mg)...  
  
----------------------------------------------  
Mike Bandli  
Historic Meteorites  
www.HistoricMeteorites.com  
and join us on Facebook:  
www.facebook.com/Meteorites1  
IMCA #5765  
-----------------------------------------------  
  
  
  
-----Original Message-----  
From: meteorite-list-boun...@meteoritecentral.com  
[mailto:meteorite-list-boun...@meteoritecentral.com] On Behalf Of
Michael  
Gilmer  
Sent: Thursday, June 30, 2011 4:17 PM  
To: Meteorite List  
Subject: [meteorite-list] Micromounts and weights - Standards Vary  
  
Hi Listees and Micronauts,  
  
There has been some discussion recently about people buying  
micromounts from a vendor on eBay and not getting the weights they  
were promised. I thought I would throw out some thoughts on micros,  
since those are my bread and butter.  
  
First, the definition of "micromount" is relative. There is no  
set-in-stone size bracket for what defines a micromount. It seems
to  
me that the general consensus is that micromounts are in the 1g
range  
for the more common types and sub-gram in weight for the rare
types.  
Very rare falls or planetaries are commonly sold by the milligram.  
Rockhounds tend to equate meteorite micromounts with mineral  
thumbnails. But generally speaking, most micromounts on the market  
today are in the sub-gram (<1g) range.  
  
Ideally, a micromount should be visually appealing (such a well  
polished, thin part slice with good surface area to weight ratio)
and  
big enough to identify the lithology of the type/fall, while at the  
same time being cheap enough to afford on a limited budget.  
  
The more preparation that goes into making a given micromount, the  
higher the price, generally speaking. At some point, it's not  
financially viable to put a lot of cutting and polishing work into  
piece of common find that is only worth a buck or two a gram.  
Smaller micros are difficult to work with during preparation, for  
obvious reasons, so many of the micromounts seen on the market are  
unpolished, rough, or broken.  
  
What motivates a person to collect micromounts varies from person
to  
person, but the most commonly cited reason for buying micros is to  
temporarily fill a void in a type collection. It could be a  
petrologic type, a find from a given geographic area, a fall from a  
specific date, etc. Often a micromount is a temporary measure until
a  
nicer specimen can be acquired, or until the needed finances to buy
a  
larger piece can be saved up. For the very rare types and  
planetaries, a micromount might be the best hope for a collector on
a  
restricted budget.  
  
There are a couple of schools of thought when it comes to dealing
and  
selling micromounts - some dealers sell specimens by weight (by  
milligram, even for specks) or some dealers offer specimens by the  
piece (by eye/photo). For the most part, I am of the latter school  
that sells micros by the piece. That means I don't weigh each and  
every micromount, unless it is a very rare and valuable meteorite
such  
as a planetary or historical fall. Each dealer has their own
methods  
for handling micromounts and we those aren't really relevant to the  
discussion at hand.  
  
When weighing micromounts, one must use an accurate scale that is  
sensitive to 1 milligram - the good ones are used by diamond and
gem  
dealers. There are many brands of these scales which range in
quality  
and accuracy. When dealing with small specks that weigh a milligram  
or two, the readings can vary from unit to unit when weighing the
same  
specimen. If a buyer pays for and is promised a micro that weighs  
100mg, it better weigh 100mg and not 50mg or 80mg. Sometimes a
buyer  
gets an added bonus because their personal scale is more accurate
than  
the seller's scale and a promised 100mg micro might weigh 120mg or  
150mg. If the seller is not sticking to a strict pricing scheme
($/g  
or $/mg), then ultimately what matters is if the buyer is happy
with  
their micromount.  
  
From a collector's standpoint, it pays to shop around for
micromounts.  
Unless it's a very rare meteorite, it's easy to find several
dealers  
offering similar-sized specimens for widely-varying prices. One
must  
also pay close attention to the reputation of the seller and the  
provenance of rare specimens. Because micros tend to be small (some  
are downright tiny), it would be easy for an unscrupulous seller to  
misrepresent specimens as something more valuable than what they
truly  
are. Chances are, if you are reading this mailing list, you are one  
of those people who can find a reputable source and who does their  
homework before sending payments across oceans on fiber-optic
cables.  
  
My own personal meteorite collection (the pieces I keep in my
cabinet  
and are not traded on my website) are mostly micromounts and I keep  
the majority of them stored in 1.25" gemjars with paper labels
inside  
the bottom, under the foam. Some people prefer membrane boxes,
small  
Riker boxes, or other storage and display methods, but that is the  
subject of an entire debate of it's own. The most commonly-seen  
container on the micromount market is the gemjar, and thus it is a  
general rule of thumb that if a specimen will fit into a gemjar,
then  
that specimen could/should be called a "micromount".  
  
Best micro-regards,  
  
MikeG  
  
--  
  

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-----  
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