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People weigh less on a hard surface


Althalus

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It's not a dieter's myth after all. You really do weigh more if you put your scales on the carpet. And now we know why.

David MacKay, a physicist at the University of Cambridge, heard about the strange effect after a chance conversation with a fellow academic. "I was just chatting to her and she said, 'You're a physicist. Why do you weigh more on carpet than on a hard surface?' I didn't have a clue, but it seemed like a good question to throw at an undergrad," he says.

So MacKay and his student Jon Pendergast brought in some standard analogue bathroom scales and tried them out on different surfaces. Sure enough, they found they weighed in at around 10 per cent more on thick carpet than on the hard floor.

To find out why, Pendergast took several sets of scales apart and measured the movement of the internal mechanisms when loaded on different surfaces. Inside each set of scales, four levers or "fulcrums", each pointing inwards from one of the corners, transmit the weight of the person to a spring-loaded metal plate at the back of the scales. The movement of the plate is then transferred via a metal rod to turn the dial on the scales.

Pendergast found that on a hard surface, the base of the scales bows. This makes the fulcrums at each corner of the scales tilt in slightly, shortening the distance between each fulcrum and the point at which the load pushes onto the lever.

"Huge difference"

Put the scales on a deep carpet, however, and the scales sink into it, so the carpet supports the base, which prevents it from bending. This increases the distance between each fulcrum and the point at which its lever is loaded, so for the same force the lever moves further. Even a small increase in this distance can add several kilograms to the weight registered on the display.

The manufacturers calibrate the scales on a hard surface, not a carpet. And this makes sense, says MacKay, as more people have easy access to a solid floor than to a deep shag-pile carpet.

"I've always thought this was an urban myth," says a spokeswoman for Weight Watchers. "But it sounds like it makes a huge difference."

Pendergast found that digital scales were far less prone to the effect because of a slight difference in their internal mechanism. He finished his investigation by using a hacksaw to cut tiny notches in each lever for the fulcrums to lock into. This cut the weight change effect on carpet from over 10 per cent to just 2.5 per cent

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Hey! Great news for all the overweighted people on the planet! Blame the Carpet!  :s2

Odin S.

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  • 11 months later...

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