Hi, thanks, tar...
I pondered the replies here for a while (sorry for not responding!) and came to see that, indeed, this "5" really is just one sig fig.
But, still, there is something going on that I have not yet been able to enunciate well. Or maybe there simply is no specific term for it. Bignose (and you?) has called it measurement accuracy, which is of course entirely accurate. But is there not some more specific term?
Mentally, I think of a directional reading of, say, 270 degrees from a compass with a full 360 degree accuracy, with that of some very crude wind vane which, for sake of argument, can only return the general direction and thus only ever returns 0 for north, 90 for east, 180 for south, and 270 for west. Yes, of course this is a contrived example - but then, there are many real-world examples of one device measuring much more accurately than another.
In this crude example, a measurement of "270" on the one is a lot different than the other, in terms of the percent circumference of a circle it might possibly describe (1/360 for the one, 1/4 for the other). One can even argue the windvane isn't even really returning 270.
A more realistic example would be e.g. comparing an old analog dial-type resistometer (volume knob) with 10 settings, to a modern digital dial knob.
But is "measurement accuracy" the best term for this? Isn't there something a little more specific? Such as ... I don't know... instrument-specific inherent precision, or something?
Thanks if anyone has ideas!