I know there are more accurate ways to measure body fat than the two listed above so that's not what this thread is about. I have a scale and a hand held analyzer and their calculations are quite a bit apart...the hand held one says 27% and the scale says 35%. So I'm wondering which one is more accurate in general. As I try to get in better shape, I'd like to make sure I'm losing fat and not much muscle in the process by using whichever one is deemed to be the more accurate calculator of the two. Again, I'm not as concerned with the actual BF% as much as I'd like to use one of these as a tool to ensure I'm not losing much muscle. I figured the bright minds on this board would be able to give some guidance. Thanks.
Both Are Worthless
Neither one is accurate
Reason For Different Percentage Readings
The scale and hand held are site sensitive.
That means if you store more body fat in your legs/lower body. Thus, the 35% reading your obtain from the scales mean more fat is stored in your lower body.
The 27% reading you obtain from the hand held means you fat percentage is lower in your upper than lower body.
Measurement Criteria
Since you have both, your probably know the protocol for obtaining the "most accurate estimation". Actually, the estimation is more like a ball park figure with a huge plus or minus factor.
Add to that the even if you use them the same time every day, there can and probably will be a big fluctuation in the reading.
A change of 1% from one day to the next would mean that a 150 lb person either gain 1.5 pound of muscle and lost 1.5 lbs of fat in a day, or gained 1.5 lbs of fat and lost 1.5 lbs of muscle.
A Simpler Solution
1) Clothes: If you are losing fat, you pant are going to become lose. The clothes don't lie.
2) Mirror: It doesn't lie either. If you look fat, you are fat.
3) Tape Measure: Losing inches in your waist, hips, thighs, etc. will tell you if your are losing weight.
4) Pictures: This provide great feed back. Take a picture every 2 - 4 weeks.
5) Strength; If the weight you are lifting decreases, you are losing some muscle.
Kenny Croxdale