I can't work it out either... sometimes it reads 1008, sometimes 1060, sometimes less occasionally more...
A hydrometer is an instrument used to measure the specific gravity (or relative density) of liquids; that is, the ratio of the density of the liquid to the density of water. It's not just sugar...
Some hydrometers come inside a plastic tube - you don't want to pour too much away when checking, nor do you want to repeatedly plunge the instrument into your fermenter (unless you sterilise and leave it in there, like i've done occasionally!!)...
Nothing like pictures, eh...
And a link to click on... (where I got the first pic from...)
Edited to add - the second picture shows a hydrometer with a scale you might not be familiar with - Brix - it's just another way of showing the percentage of stuff in liquids (fermentable and non fermentable - it's why your brew might finish between 1005 - 1015 Specific Gravity, or 1.28brix to 3.82brix, not 1.000 - 0.00brix - the reading for potable tap water at room temp). You read it the same way.There's other scales too:
Baum scale, formerly used in industrial chemistry and pharmacology
Brix scale, primarily used in fruit juice, wine making and the sugar industry
Oechsle scale, used for measuring the density of grape must
Plato scale, primarily used in brewing and probably your scale...
and the Twaddell scale, formerly used in the bleaching and dyeing industries
Also hydrometer readings alter depending on the temperature of the liquid - not by a huge amount
[URL="http://"http://hbd.org/cgi-bin/recipator/recipator/hydrometer.html?11585439""]but near it in mind...[/URL]