Fish Scale 110 LB Review
Our verdict
The Fish Scale 110 LB earns a 4.6 star rating across 15 reviews at $23.99, undercutting the Rapala RMDS-50 by more than four dollars while landing a higher review score. With 200 plus buyers a month, it looks like the budget pick for anglers who just need a number on the scale, not a gripper system.
Check price on AmazonBest for
Anglers who want a simple, inexpensive way to log catch weight without paying Rapala or Eastaboga prices. At $23.99 it fits a tackle box budget and the 200 plus monthly buyers suggest it moves fast among casual weigh-ins.
Skip if
Skip it if you want documented specs on material or capacity in pounds, since none are listed here. Anglers who prioritize a long review history, like the Rapala RGSDS-50's 172 reviews, may want more data before buying.
- Priced 10% above the category median ($21.79 across 48 tracked models)
Our scorecard
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Owner rating4.6/5
4.6 average across 15 owner ratings
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Popularity0.1/5
15 owner reviews, fewer than most models here
The overall score is owner satisfaction weighted by how many reviews back it, so a high rating from few reviews counts for less. The bars below show where this model stands against the other fishing gear and tackle we track in this category on price, popularity and size. Context, not marks against it, and our read of the data, not a lab test.
Overview
Pull a fish over the gunwale and the first question is always the same: how much does it weigh. The Fish Scale 110 LB answers that for $23.99, a price point that sits well under both Rapala models in this comparison and nowhere near the $285.00 Eastaboga gripper and scale combo.
At 4.6 stars across 15 reviews, its rating matches the Rapala RGSDS-50 exactly, though with far fewer reviews behind it. The listing does not publish a material breakdown or exact weight the way the Rapala RMDS-50 does with its 28.07 gram build, so buyers are working with less published detail than on the pricier options. What is confirmed is the 110 pound name-implied capacity and In Stock availability.
Bought 200 plus times in the past month, it outpaces the demand signal on both Rapala scales in this set, which show 0 plus. That gap suggests current buyers are choosing it on price and rating rather than a long track record, since 15 reviews is a thin sample next to the Rapala RGSDS-50's 172 or the Eastaboga's 61. For anglers who want a working number without spending Rapala or Eastaboga money, it is the cheaper entry, just with less review history to lean on.
Pros
- Priced at $23.99, well under both Rapala scales in this comparison ($28.50 and $48.55).
- Carries a 4.6 star rating, tying the Rapala RGSDS-50's top score in this set.
- Bought 200 plus times in the past month, the strongest demand figure among the fish scales compared here.
- Listed with a 110 pound name-implied capacity for larger catches.
- Currently In Stock and ready to ship.
Cons
- Only 15 reviews on record, far fewer than the Rapala RGSDS-50's 172 or RMDS-50's 126.
- No published material or exact weight spec, unlike the Rapala RMDS-50's listed 28.07 grams.
- No gripper function bundled in, unlike the Eastaboga combo unit.
- Brand is unlisted, so there is no manufacturer track record to check against Rapala's history.
Performance notes
A 110 pound rated fish scale covers essentially every freshwater catch and most inshore saltwater fish anglers will hook, since it sits well above the 50 pound capacity Rapala builds into both the RMDS-50 and RGSDS-50. The listing does not specify the scale's own weight or housing material, which matters if you are comparing it to the Rapala RMDS-50's 28.07 gram build or the RGSDS-50's half pound heft, since a lighter unit is easier to clip to a belt loop or tackle bag. Without a published material spec, buyers cannot compare corrosion resistance or drop tolerance against the two Rapala units or the Eastaboga combo. What is documented is the price and the In Stock status, so anyone weighing capacity and cost against the alternatives here is working from a shorter spec sheet than the Rapala listings provide.
What buyers say
The 4.6 star average across 15 reviews puts it in a tie with the Rapala RGSDS-50 on rating, but the review count is a fraction of that scale's 172 and the RMDS-50's 126, so the sample is still thin enough that a handful of reviews could shift the average. What stands out more is the 200 plus bought-last-month figure, which is the only nonzero demand number among the fish scales in this comparison, since both Rapala listings and the Eastaboga combo show 0 plus. That combination, a strong current sales pace paired with a short review history, reads like a newer listing gaining traction on price rather than an established scale with years of accumulated feedback behind it.
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Frequently asked questions
How much does the Fish Scale 110 LB cost?
It lists at $23.99, which undercuts the Rapala RMDS-50's $28.50 and sits well below the Rapala RGSDS-50's $48.55. Compared to the $285.00 Eastaboga gripper and scale combo in this same category, it is priced for anglers who want a straightforward weigh-in tool rather than a multi-function gripper system.
What is the weight capacity of the Fish Scale 110 LB?
The name indicates a 110 pound capacity, more than double the 50 pound rating listed on both the Rapala RMDS-50 and RGSDS-50. That headroom matters for anglers targeting larger species, though the listing does not break out the scale's own housing weight or material the way the Rapala models do.
Is the Fish Scale 110 LB a good buy given it only has 15 reviews?
Fifteen reviews is a small sample compared to the Rapala RGSDS-50's 172 or the RMDS-50's 126, so the 4.6 star average carries less statistical weight. That said, the 200 plus bought-last-month figure is the strongest demand signal among the fish scales in this comparison, suggesting current buyers are picking it despite the shorter track record.