Seca 374
- Weighing tray with high side walls for increased safety
- Weighing and measuring in one step thanks to optional length measuring rod
- Three-step damping for fast weighing
- Large tray is suitable for weighing toddlers while sitting
- Medical-grade seca scale technology with precise graduation
- Capacity: 20 kg
Functions and Properties:
- Overload protection
- TARE
- Auto-clear
- BMIF
- Auto-HOLD
- kg/lbs switch-over
- Automatic switch-off
- Wireless interface
- RESET
- Acoustic signals can be activated
- Damping
Today the ambitious young metalworker A.C.C. Joachims would have been an apprentice with distinction.
His employer was the monk and mechanic Alois Quintenz who had already invented the decimal scale in Strasbourg in 1821. The clever apprentice acquired the necessary knowledge from him and brought it to Hamburg. There Joachims founded Germany's first scale factory on July 11th, 1840. He primarily produced weigh bridges, decimal scales, Roberval balances, and column scales that he sold all over the world. A small factory developed out of the metalwork shop whose luster faded when Joachims died in 1874.
The mechanical engineer Frederik Vogel bought the scale factory in 1888, expanded the product range, and introduced the brand name "seca" which he had copyrighted in 1897. The name is derived from the Latin word "secare" meaning "to cut." Why? Because one cut plays an important role in the measuring accuracy of a mechanical scale.
At the start of the industrialization Frederik Vogel moved the company from Königstraße in the Altona district to the Hammer Steindamm in Wandsbek in 1904.
The headquarters of seca is still located there today. Just about every doctor was already familiar with and using the mechanical scales with the red logo in the first half of the 20th century because they are considered especially durable thanks to their high quality
seca had already survived World War I and the Great Depression as Frederik Vogel passed the management of seca on to his son Robert.
The new CEO carried the company through the difficult time of World War II and started with the reconstruction immediately afterward. His skill paid off, because seca quickly became famous for its groundbreaking developments.
Sönke Vogel succeeded his father as the head of the company after his death.
He expanded the market leadership of seca with a new strategic orientation. His concept was to concentrate on medical measuring and weighing with top precision. "When it comes to weighing, use seca scales!" Delivery vans with large advertisements drove through the city presenting and selling the new products, always very close to the customer.