I think that’s about right. The digital scales are So much better than the old beam-balance devices in general. Ortofon makes a digital for around $120 that is accurate to about 0.001gm - 1 mg - (IIRC, there are several cheaper digitals that boast this level of sensitivity), I’m not sure the difference is audible or at all significant, the two beams I have I’ve compared at lower numbers and they’re about equal. A thirty dollar SME scale with a 1.5 gm upper limit and a plastic Ortofon scale (free with $2875 cartridge or $15 from Amazon) both as accurate with visual interpolation as a $20 Amazon digital scale.
But that $3,000 tonearm has a dial that SAYS 1.75gm, which actually weights about 15% more (off the top of my head). One would think a simple mechanical spring gadget would have an easy fix, a calibration mechanism, which leads back to my original question.
It’s my professional nature to worry about small details like this, and an academic question I find interesting at its core.
I recall a story - many say apocryphal - about some poor sod who was summarily let go from a job at Rolls Royce auto when he used the expression “good enough.”