What do you mean by a 'stand alone scale', and 'greater than .1 grain'?HALODIN wrote:I've been thinking about the process of reloading today and it seems to me the greatest room for error (or lack of non repetitiveness) is the amount of powder. Now I'm pretty sure I'm leaning towards an electronic precision scale, but I'm just wondering if anyone knows of any stand alone scale that is capable of measuring greater than .1 grain? I know it won't be cheap and it's possibly a scientific precision scale, but I'm struggling to find one...
Do you mean something with readability less than 0.1 grain?
If so, there are plenty. There are even some that are quite cheap. Just because they have a particular degree of readability it doesn't necessarily follow that they are any good. It also doesn't follow that you will be able to see any difference between charges dispensed to +/-0.1 grain and +/-0.01 grain. Plenty of very good ammo is made with relatively coarse charge spreads. Plenty of very experienced folk don't believe anyone can tell the difference. As I mentioned before, I have balances that read to 0.0001 grams (0.0015 grains), but I load with coarser balances than this, and I achieved some of my best performances with ammo loaded with beam balances - relatively low-end beam balances. Don't get too hung-up on charge-weights. Make sure you have a beam balance on your loading bench. If you want to explore things in more detail later then go ahead.
If you eventually do want to look into high resolution digital balances for reloading you would be better off looking to spend £500 on a better quality 0.001g balance than £1000 on a lower quality 0.0001g balance (like the one in your post). Buying the right type of sensing technology for the application will get you better response times, drift performance, linearity and stability. Learn to load with a beam balance. You will learn how powder behaves, how to control it and what you can do with it.
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