Pennsylvania 7500 vs 7600 Counting Scales

If you are comparing the Pennsylvania 7500 and Pennsylvania 7600 counting scales, the right choice depends on capacity, counting workflow, options, and how the scale will be used day to day.

Both product families are useful for counting parts, pieces, fasteners, fittings, packaged goods, warehouse inventory, and stockroom items. The simplest starting point is deciding whether you need a 50 lb or 100 lb bench counting scale.

Quick answer

Shop the core 7500 and 7600 models

Comparison table

Model Capacity Best fit Shop
Pennsylvania 7500-50HR 50 lb Small parts, lower-capacity inventory counting, bench counting View 7500-50HR
Pennsylvania 7500-100HR 100 lb Heavier bins, larger batches, stockroom and warehouse counting View 7500-100HR
Pennsylvania 7600-50HR 50 lb Parts counting and bench count/weigh use in commercial settings View 7600-50HR
Pennsylvania 7600-100HR 100 lb Higher-capacity counting workflows and heavier inventory containers View 7600-100HR

Which one should you buy?

If you are not sure which model fits, think about the heaviest loaded container you plan to count, the smallest piece you need to count accurately, and whether you need any communication, battery, or workflow options.

For many buyers, the first decision is not 7500 vs 7600. It is whether the loaded container belongs on a 50 lb or 100 lb scale.

Read the 50 lb vs 100 lb counting scale guide.

Need help?

ScaleMart can help you choose the right Pennsylvania counting scale for inventory, warehouse, stockroom, parts, or fulfillment work.

Call ScaleMart for help choosing the right counting scale before you buy. A short conversation can help confirm whether a 50 lb or 100 lb Pennsylvania model makes sense for your parts, containers, and counting workflow.