A load cell is like a super-smart scale that can tell how heavy something is, but it doesn’t need to be on the floor.
Imagine you have a seesaw at the playground. When one kid sits on one end, the other side goes down. That’s how weight works: more weight means more force pushing down. A load cell uses this idea, but instead of a seesaw, it has special parts that change shape when something heavy is placed on them.
How It Works
Think of a load cell like a spring inside a toy. When you press down on the toy, the spring gets squished, and the more weight you put on it, the more it squishes. The load cell measures how much it squishes to figure out how heavy something is.
Why It Matters
These smart scales are used in places like grocery stores, factories, and even your phone! They help weigh packages, lift heavy things with cranes, or track how much you eat, all without needing a big scale on the floor.
Examples
- Imagine a seesaw that sends an electrical signal every time someone sits down, that's a load cell in action.
- Load cells help grocery stores know exactly how much fruit you're buying without needing to count each piece.
Ask a question
See also
- How Does Robotic Sensors for Perception Algorithms Work?
- How Does Micro-electro-mechanical systems (MEMS) sensors Work?
- How Does Sensors & Actuators Explained – Basics to Advanced | NEXTED Work?
- What are infrared sensors?
- What are ambient light sensors?