Frankford Arsenal pocket scale is good enough. You don’t need Sartorius or Mettler Toledo for this.
Another thing to play with is powder. Titegroup is dense, I don’t like it in volumetric dispensers (e.g. Dillon), because any variation in volume translates into bigger difference in weight compared to a less dense powder. If you weighing each one individually on a scale it should not matter as much. Try to find some Vihtavuori N320 - it works very well in 9mm.
Thanks for the advice. I've been using Bullseye for years but can't get it anywhere anymore. My supplier got some Titegtoup in so I thought I'd try it and was lucky to get it. I think all the powder is being sent to the U.S military for Ukraine and Israel.
I'm thinking if you got 3.5grn of TG, you got reduced springs in your gun. As TG and W231 load data were only off a few tenths. I doubt my gun would cycle with that low of a charge. I got a Shadow with the factory springs.
Amazon my weight or smart weight scale is accurate enough.
My SP-01 is a Shadowmate. Gunsmith tuned from the factory. I haven't changed the stock springs but did get extra springs with the gun with NO WAY of determining the weight of them. I ordered a powder scale from Amazon (same as the RCBS). Here are some pictures of my gun.



Here is my Frankford next to a 20$ Amazon smartphone weight scale. Both with 20g check weight. 50G check weights were a bit more in difference.
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Thanks I ordered a digital powder scale on Amazon (Same as the RCBS)
3.5gr of Titegroup under a 124gr plated bullet is almost as light as it gets. Titegroup's a great powder. It's versatile, it meters very well (even volumetrically), and relatively cheap. Some people think it's too "snappy", and maybe that's what you're feeling, but I've never noticed/cared. You can try a different powder (HP-38/Win 231, Accurate #2, Unique etc.) but I'm not sure if that's going to solve any of your problems. Personally, I wouldn't buy anything from Vihtavuori, it's just overpriced internet hyped powder. To each their own, I guess.
P.S. I too own the FA digital scale (with a traditional balance type as a backup) and find that it's sufficient for loading pistol rounds. As OkayShooter stated above, many cheap(er) scales are accurate enough.
P.S.S. I'm going to sound like a broken record but...you should always determine your own max OAL. OAL's listed in manuals/data are useless. Make a long inert dummy round and continually shorten it until in plunks and spins in the barrel(s) you intend to use with that load. Every bullet/barrel combo is different and when you load a new bullet you should once again determine the max OAL.
I think SNAPPY is a good description! Like I said earlier, maybe just me?
I use 4.0gr of Titegroup with 124gr Campro RN bullets in ALL my pistols and PCCs with 0 issues. I've run it through the chrono and the velocity is right within the specs. That's the best way to verify loads.
Titegroup has a very little play room due to small volumes, so 0.2gr error might be critical. For that matter, I have a secondary electronics scale to cross check once in a while as well as use check weights.
3.5gr will not cycle some of my guns, though.
Thanks for the info. That's exactly what I'm using. 124 Gn Campro RN. I'll check my beam scale for accuracy but my gun cycles just fine.
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