- Location
- Hamilton, Ontario
Opinions ???
They are all pretty much the same in my opinion. I got one as part of an RCBS Rockchucker kit and it has been great. I consider a set of "standard weights" a must have to calibrate the scale at various load weights otherwise who knows what your really measuring. I use my scale as a quality control measure during all reloading activity.
This always gets me, "calibrate a beam scale!"
Please, someone tell me how you do that.
The only adjusting required on a beam scale is to set it on a level surface, set the scale at zero, and make sure the beam is in the middle, at zero. If it is not dead centre, carefully adjust it to point at dead centre and you've got it. Maybe in ten years you should recheck, to see if it still indicates zero, when set at zero.
A well made beam scale, like the RCBS mentioned, will be just as accurate at 263.4 grains as it will at .4 grains.
I should have been more clear, calibrate was a poor choice of words. Use the standards to ensure that the scale is measuring 5 grains when you put 5 grains on the scale for example. Does that make sense now H4831?
No.
As explained, you just check balance. If it shows zero when the weights are adjusted to zero, then it will weigh correctly at all weights marked on the beam and no check weights are required.
Good beam scale makers, like RCBS, are very precise in making their instruments, so it will be correct.
You have a set of check weights for every charge you throw? Wow!Not always true. I have an rcbs balance that weighs 0.1 - 0.3 grs low at any given weight according to the rcbs check weights I have. It depends on where the weights are sitting on the beam, if they're forward or back in there slot on the beam. And yes, I've cleaned it, changed locations on the work bench, pretty much everything. It's consistently low. I now balance to zero with the check weights set to the amount I'm using. YMMV.



























