ScienceBlog.com Science Gifts
 Location:  Home» Health » Body Fat Monitors » Accu Measure Gold Fat Trac II Digital Skinfold Caliper  
Related Categories
• Body Fat Monitors
Health Monitors
Medical Supplies Equipment
• Personal Care
Products
Health Personal Care
• Digital
Health Care Attribute (feature_two_browse-bin)
Browse Refinements

Accu Measure Gold Fat Trac II Digital Skinfold Caliper

Accu Measure Gold Fat Trac II Digital Skinfold Caliper

enlarge enlarge 
Brand: AccuFitness
Category: Health And Beauty

List Price: $59.95
Buy New: $25.75
You Save: $34.20 (57%)



New (3) from $25.75

Rating: 4.0 out of 5 stars 24 reviews
Sales Rank: 2034

Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.3
Dimensions (in): 5 x 5 x 5
Legal Disclaimer: This information is intended for your general knowledge only and is not a substitute for professional medical advice or treatment for specific medical conditions. This information is not intended to diagnose, treat, cure or prevent any disease. Always seek the advice of your qualified physician or other health care provider with any questions you may have regarding a medical condition. Never disregard or delay in seeking medical advice.

MPN: 107002303
Model: GOLD
UPC: 744543420030
ASIN: B0007ZAM1U

Promotion: Get free shipping on this item when you spend $5.00 or more on All Items offered by Heart Rate Monitors USA. Terms and Conditions
Promotion: Get free shipping on this item when you spend $100.00 or more on Polar Heart Rate Monitors offered by Heart Rate Monitors USA. Enter code A6S66OFA at checkout. Terms and Conditions
Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days

Features:
  • With User Guide and Tips for Obtaining the Most Accurate Body Fat Measurements!
  • Measure your Body Fat Percentage: by yourself, in seconds and with superior clinical accuracy.

Similar Items:

  • Body Fat Caliper by Accu-Measure
  • MyoTape Body Tape Measure
  • Omron HBF-306C Fat Loss Monitor
  • Omron HBF-400 Body Fat Monitor and Scale
  • Accu-Measure Fitness 3000 Personal Body Fat Tester

Editorial Reviews:

Product Description
The FatTrack II has a Super-Accurate Digital Measurement System with these great features: Uses patented Floating Code Thickness Measuring System for 1mm accuracy and 100% repeatability. No more tables and charts to interpret. Uses most popular trainer-recommended 3-site measurement system for men and women - upper, midsection, and lower body. Hand held caliper lets users measure body fat by themselves! Incorporates sophisticated mathematical Jackson-Pollack body density equations for determining body fat. Audible BEEP indicates correct pressure and measurement, ensuring accuracy. Self-calibrating for lifetime accurate measurements. Fitness rating indicator based on gender, age body fat %. Stores 3 personal profiles. Statistical reports display-shows maximum and minimum readings at each measuring point.


Customer Reviews:   Read 19 more reviews...

2 out of 5 stars Only thing usable was the tape   November 10, 2008
Raju Penumetcha
The measuring tape was great. The caliper itself is not user friendly, you need a second person to help out, and each time I pinch my skin I get a different reading, better off using one of the electrical scales, might not be accurate but better than this torture.


3 out of 5 stars It does what it is supposed to.   October 5, 2008
Charles
I like this product a lot. The only real problem I have had is that the measurements can vary greatly each time unless you are very careful. The measurements goes off of the amount of pressured applied and when it reaches the right pressure before you set the caliper you could get false result. br / br /The measuring tape is awesome, it makes measuring arms, legs and waists a snap. I use this more than the caliper.


3 out of 5 stars Decent product   September 23, 2008
W. Ayers (SC United States)
This is a decent product. The tape measure is nice for measuring your arms, waist, and other body parts. However it is hard for me to get a consistently accurate reading from the calipers. It may just be me.


3 out of 5 stars Accu-measure / not that accurate?   August 16, 2008
Benjamin R. Berry (MN)
It is hard to get the same reading twice with this device. Making it hard to know what your real bf% is.


5 out of 5 stars Works Perfectly if you are Detail Oriented   April 20, 2008
Lisa Shea
31 out of 31 found this review helpful

Back in the old days before they had scales and hand-held devices to measure your body fat percentage, you actually had to "pinch your skin" to figure out your body fat. Maybe you remember this from grade school? You can still do that if you want to! Here is a digital caliper, the Fat Track II. br / br /First, how a caliper works in general. You pinch a portion of your skin up away from your body. The three locations are your thigh, your abdomen, and then an "upper area". For men the upper area is the chest. For women (for sort of obvious reasons) it has to be somewhere else, so they go with the back of their arm. This gives a general overall body fat measurement. br / br /How can this work? Fat tends to line the inside of your skin. For example, that is why people who were obesely overweight, who then drop down to only "overweight" have "pouches". It is because they still have fat inside their skin and that fat is pulling the skin down. If you watch The Biggest Loser, you know that if you really do lose that fat, your skin tones up. You lose the pouch. The caliper is measuring the thickness of that fat layer against your skin. br / br /The downside of this technique is it can be VERY hard to learn how to do. You have to pinch the skin in just the right spot to get it to fold. You have to measure that exact same spot each day, to keep the results consistent! If you measure one location one day, and another location the next, you aren't measuring apples to apples. br / br /Plus if you are very overweight it might simply be hard to get the skin to pull out and fold. It might be tight against the underlying fat. br / br /However, the only "real" test that is 100% accurate is to go to a health club with an underwater scale. You submerge your entire body (including your head) underwater and weigh yourself there. Since fat, muscle etc. has different densities, this guarantees that the scale can determine how much is fat. Most of us can't afford to do that! br / br /How does this compare with the electrical current systems? The upside for the electrical current stand-on scales and hand-held measurers is that that they require no skill. You stand on it or hold it and your fat number is provided. The downside is that, since it involves an electrical current, your body needs to be conductive. If your feet are too wet, or lotioned, or too dry, the current won't conduct properly. Some people try those scales dripping wet or bone dry and then complain they don't work properly. Also, those scales tend to be expensive. br / br /So this caliper has the advantage of being relatively cheap, and second only to the full submission technique in its POTENTIAL for accuracy. However, if you aren't good at measuring in the exact spot - or doing it with the right technique - it *cannot* be accurate. A system designed to measure fat at the upper thigh isn't going to work if you're using it on your lower thigh. A system designed to measure skin fold fat isn't going to work if you're using it on your muscle. So there is a LOT of room here for human error. br / br /That all being said - if you take the time to learn about the areas you're measuring, and pay CLOSE attention to the spots you use, and are precise about how you fold, this can work amazingly well! In that sense, everything is far more "under your control" than with an electronic scale. The caliper is small and fits in your purse. It's cheap. It's very reliable and reproducible. br / br /So in terms of potential and doing what it should, I give this a 5/5. But as a caveat - if you know you're just not a precise person, and won't pay that much attention to the details - I'd say buy a scale. The scale is FAR easier for most people, and is very accurate. Just have your feet medium moist and lotion free when you stand on it. Either way you should have SOME fat measurement device in your home. It is extremely critical in your goal of maintaining a healthy weight to know not just your "raw weight" but also how much of you is fat. br /