
Digital scales
by ProScale
The Proscale Snake-eyes is a compact digital pocket scale that delivers 0.01g resolution across a 111g capacity — the kind of precision you'd expect from lab equipment, crammed into something smaller than your phone. At just 8.9 x 6.35 x 1.9cm, it disappears into a jacket pocket or the coin compartment of a bag. The blue backlit LCD screen reads clearly whether you're in a dim room or bright sunlight, and the patented VibraKill pad isolates the weighing platform from nearby vibrations so your readings stay accurate even on a wobbly table. If you need to weigh anything from herbs to jewellery components down to the hundredth of a gram, this is the scale we'd reach for first.
We've sold pocket scales for over two decades, and the complaints are always the same: the hinge snaps, the readings drift, or the thing dies after three uses because it chewed through batteries while sitting in a drawer. The Proscale 111 addresses all three. The heavy-duty plastic cover isn't decorative — it's properly rigid. You can toss this scale into a rucksack next to your keys and lighter without worrying about the display getting scratched or the weighing platform bending. We've seen cheaper scales crack from exactly that kind of casual pocket abuse.
The auto shut-off is a small feature that saves real frustration. Leave it on by accident and it powers down after a period of inactivity, so you're not greeted by a dead battery next time you need it. Two AAA batteries run it, and they last a good while thanks to that shut-off. The scale also remembers the last weight you measured — handy if you get distracted mid-task and need to recall where you left off.
One honest limitation: 111g capacity means this isn't the scale for weighing large quantities. If you regularly need to measure anything above about 100g, you'll want something with a higher ceiling. But for precise, small-quantity weighing — botanicals, spices, gemstones, postal items — the 0.01g resolution on the Proscale 111 is genuinely hard to beat at this size. A kitchen scale measuring to 1g increments simply won't cut it when you need that level of detail.
The Proscale 111 offers four weighing modes: grams (g), ounces (oz), troy ounces (ozt), and pennyweights (dwt). Most people stick with grams, but if you're weighing precious metals or working in a trade that uses troy measurements, you won't need a conversion chart. Switching between modes takes a single button press — no menu diving.
| Specification | Value |
|---|---|
| Capacity | 111g |
| Resolution | 0.01g |
| Weighing modes | g, oz, ozt, dwt |
| Dimensions | 8.9 x 6.35 x 1.9 cm |
| Display | Blue backlit LCD |
| Power | 2 x AAA batteries |
| Auto shut-off | Yes |
| Calibration weight | 100g |
| VibraKill pad | Included |
| Tare function | Yes |
| SKU | HS0132 |
The Proscale 111 arrives calibrated and ready to use straight out of the box. If you notice readings drifting over time — or you just want peace of mind — recalibration takes about 30 seconds. You'll need a 100g calibration weight (sold separately). Follow the instructions in the manual: power on, enter calibration mode, place the 100g weight, confirm. Done. We'd recommend recalibrating every few months if you use the scale regularly, or after it's taken a knock.
On a scale this small, the weighing platform is barely larger than a postage stamp. Trying to weigh loose herbs or powder directly on that tiny surface is asking for spillage. The Proscale's cover doubles as a weighing tray with raised edges — tare the weight of the cover, then load your material into it. It's a simple design choice that makes a real difference in daily use. We've watched people struggle with pocket scales that don't have this feature, chasing grains of powder across a table with a credit card. Not dignified.
The cover itself has a satisfying weight to it. Heavy-duty plastic with a slight texture — it feels like it could survive being stepped on, which is more than you can say for the flimsy lids on some competing models. When it's closed, the scale feels like a solid little brick in your hand.
Complete your weighing setup with a 100g calibration weight to keep your Proscale 111 dialled in over time. If you need a scale with more capacity for larger quantities, take a look at our other digital scales — we carry models ranging from pocket-sized to tabletop units with capacities up to several kilograms.
| Feature | Proscale 111 Snake-eyes | Typical budget pocket scale |
|---|---|---|
| Resolution | 0.01g | 0.1g |
| Capacity | 111g | 200–500g |
| VibraKill anti-vibration | Yes (patented) | No |
| Cover doubles as tray | Yes, with raised edges | Sometimes, flat lid |
| Backlit display | Blue LCD | Often no backlight |
| Weighing modes | 4 (g, oz, ozt, dwt) | Usually 2 (g, oz) |
| Auto shut-off | Yes | Sometimes |
Budget scales often offer higher capacity but sacrifice resolution — 0.1g instead of 0.01g. That's a tenfold difference in precision. If you're measuring anything where a tenth of a gram matters, the Proscale 111 is the better tool. The trade-off is the 111g cap, which is plenty for small-quantity work but won't suit bulk weighing.
The Proscale 111 reads to 0.01g — one hundredth of a gram. It ships factory-calibrated, and the VibraKill pad isolates the platform from surface vibrations. For a pocket scale at this price point, the accuracy is genuinely impressive and consistent across repeated measurements.
Two AAA batteries. They're widely available and cheap to replace. The auto shut-off feature extends battery life by powering down the scale after a period of inactivity, so you won't drain them by forgetting to switch it off.
Yes. You'll need a 100g calibration weight. Enter calibration mode via the button sequence in the manual, place the weight on the platform, and confirm. Takes about 30 seconds. The scale arrives pre-calibrated, so you only need to do this if readings start drifting.
The platform itself is small, but the protective cover doubles as a weighing tray with raised edges. Use the tare function to zero out the cover's weight, then add your material. The edges keep loose herbs or powder contained — it works surprisingly well for a scale this compact.
It's a patented rubber pad that sits beneath the scale and absorbs vibrations from the surface it's placed on. Footsteps, nearby traffic, even someone tapping the table — the VibraKill pad dampens all of that so your reading stays stable and accurate.
Easily. At 8.9 x 6.35 x 1.9cm, it's roughly the size of a small smartphone. The hard cover protects it from bumps and pressure, so you can carry it in a trouser or jacket pocket without worrying about damage.
Yes. The scale stores the last weight you measured, so if you power it off and back on, you can recall your previous reading. Handy if you get interrupted or need to double-check a measurement after the fact.
Last updated: April 2026