
Digital scales
by DIPSE
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The Dipse 420 is a compact digital scale built specifically for weighing cannabis and other dried herbs with 0.01g accuracy across a 100g range. Made in Germany by Dipse, it packs a stainless steel weighing platform, backlit LCD display, and six weighing modes into a pocket-sized unit that weighs your material down to the hundredth of a gram. If you're tired of guessing, this is where guessing stops.
| Spec | Value |
|---|---|
| Capacity | 100g |
| Accuracy | 0.01g (two decimal places) |
| Weighing modes | g / oz / gn / ct / ozt / dwt |
| Platform material | Stainless steel (round) |
| Display | Blue backlit LCD |
| Power supply | 2x AAA batteries (included) |
| Calibration | Auto-calibration on startup |
| Functions | Tare, auto-off |
| Manufacturer | Dipse (Germany) |
| SKU | HS0136 |
Pair the Dipse 420 with a stash jar or smell-proof bag to keep your weighed portions fresh and discreet. If you're rolling after weighing, a decent grinder like the SLX or Santa Cruz Shredder saves time and gives you a more consistent grind — which, incidentally, also makes your scale readings more reliable.
Here's what we see behind the counter: people eyeball their herb, consistently overpack, and wonder why they're burning through their stash twice as fast as they should. A 0.01g scale removes the guesswork entirely. You weigh 0.30g for a single session, you know exactly what you're working with, and your supply lasts the way it should.
The Dipse 420 sits in the sweet spot between the cheap plastic scales that drift after a month and the lab-grade units that cost five times as much. The stainless steel platform is properly durable — you can feel the weight of it in your hand, which is more than you can say for the flimsy aluminium platforms on budget models. The round design is a nice touch too; herb doesn't get trapped in corners the way it does on square platforms.
One honest limitation: 100g capacity means this isn't the scale for weighing large quantities. If you need to weigh 200g or more in one go, you'll want something with a higher capacity. But for daily personal use — portioning, checking what you've got, making sure you're getting what you paid for — 100g with 0.01g precision is the best combination of range and accuracy at this price point.
We've sold a lot of pocket scales over the years. The ones that come back? Almost always the sub-ten-quid models with plastic platforms and no auto-calibration. The Dipse 420 auto-calibrates every time you switch it on, which means your first reading of the day is just as accurate as your hundredth. That sounds like a small thing until you've been burned by a scale that drifts 0.05g after sitting in a drawer for a week.
The blue backlit display is genuinely useful — not a gimmick. If you've ever tried to read a non-backlit scale in a dimly lit room, you know the squinting struggle. The Dipse 420 stays readable even in near-darkness. The four large front buttons are simple: on/off, mode, tare, and calibration. No fiddly menus, no instruction manual needed.
The removable cover doubling as a weighing tray is the kind of practical German engineering we appreciate. Pop the lid off, place it on the platform, hit tare, and you've got a contained surface for loose material. No extra accessories to lose.
| Feature | Dipse 420 | Typical Budget Scale |
|---|---|---|
| Accuracy | 0.01g | 0.1g |
| Capacity | 100g | 100–500g |
| Platform | Stainless steel (round) | Plastic or thin aluminium |
| Auto-calibration | Yes (on startup) | Often manual only |
| Backlit display | Blue LCD | Sometimes, often dim |
| Weighing modes | 6 (g/oz/gn/ct/ozt/dwt) | 2–4 |
| Cover doubles as tray | Yes | Rarely |
| Origin | Made in Germany | Usually unspecified |
The key difference is that 0.01g vs 0.1g accuracy gap. A budget scale reading "0.3g" could actually be anywhere between 0.25g and 0.35g. The Dipse 420 reading "0.30g" means 0.295g to 0.305g. That's a tenfold improvement in precision — and when you're working with small amounts, that precision is the whole point.
It reads to 0.01g, which means hundredths of a gram. For context, that's accurate enough for jewellers weighing gold in carats. For herb, it's more than sufficient — you'll know exactly what you've got down to the centigram.
No. The scale runs auto-calibration every time you power it on. Just make sure it's on a flat, stable surface when you switch it on and let it zero out before you start weighing.
Two AAA batteries, which come included in the box. The auto-off function helps preserve battery life, so a pair should last you a good while with regular use.
No — 100g is the maximum capacity. Exceeding it risks damaging the load cell and voiding any accuracy the scale offers. If you regularly need to weigh more than 100g at once, look at a scale with a 200g or 500g capacity instead.
Tare resets the display to zero with a container already on the platform. Place the cover-tray on the scale, hit tare, and it zeros out. Now only the weight of what you add to the tray is shown — the tray itself isn't counted.
Yes, this is where 0.01g accuracy matters most. The Dipse 420 reliably distinguishes between 0.10g and 0.15g, which cheaper 0.1g-accuracy scales simply cannot do. It's the best pocket scale for sub-gram precision at this price point.
Surface matters. An uneven or soft surface (carpet, a wobbly table) throws off the load cell. Always use the Dipse 420 on a hard, flat, stable surface and let it auto-calibrate after moving it.
Last updated: April 2026