Quote:
Originally Posted by martineta
I am sufficiently scared to put my back-up balance beam scale back on the bench to double check what my electronic scale is telling me. That and of course eyeballing every powder drop in the case to see that they look the same. Never had anything like that happen but a first could be a last.
Thanks for pointing two scales out.
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A set of calibrated weights is cheaper than an extra balance. I'm not against having a second balance as a spare, but if the two don't agree you still need a reference weight to tell which (if either) is correct.
There are a lot of ways to mess up with any balance. The most likely one is to improperly tare the tray used to hold the powder being measured. The balance itself doesn't have to be defective to give wrong readings.
Make sure your body, bench, and balance don't have an electrostatic charge both for weighing accuracy and safe powder handling. There are pros and cons for using conductive and non conductive tools. There is slightly more spark hazard with metal tools but they greatly reduce electrostatic errors. I use a metal bench and metal chair on a bare concrete floor. Basically the same setup as for handling semiconductors.
How many of you weigh each of your loaded cartridges? I reject any cartridge which is more than 1% from the average. With heavy bullets and small charges of fast powers (45 ACP for example) that will always detect no powder or double charges though it doesn't insure velocity consistency.