Capacity Crossover
Decision Matrix
Capacity is the strongest single predictor of which geometry fits. Below 500 lb, bending beam is usually the lower-cost answer at equivalent accuracy. Between 500 lb and 5,000 lb, the decision depends on side-load environment and mounting constraints. Above 5,000 lb, shear beam dominates on durability, side-load tolerance, and industry mounting compatibility.
Worked Example 1 — 2,000 lb Platform Scale in a Warehouse
Forklifts bump the scale edges regularly. Bending beam at this capacity would drift zero within days of forklift contact and require weekly recalibration. Four SBS shear beam cells in a corner-mount configuration, summed through a junction box, absorb the lateral forces without drift and hold calibration for 12+ months between scheduled checks. Choose shear beam.
Worked Example 2 — 100 lb Laboratory Bench Scale
Indoor environment, axial loading only, no vibration source. BSH bending beam at 100 lb capacity delivers ±0.03% accuracy at about 60% of the cost of a comparable shear beam, with a smaller mounting footprint that fits the bench-scale form factor. Choose bending beam.
For applications where the capacity sits in the 500–5,000 lb uncertain band — retail floor scales, conveyor weigh-stations, food processing platforms — the deciding factor becomes the environment. If forklifts, wheeled carts, vibration sources, or off-axis product movement are present, select shear beam; if the loading is consistently vertical and controlled, bending beam remains viable. Accuracy class compliance with OIML R60 is achievable with both geometries at matching capacities.