IMO everyone needs a decent quality beam scale even if they also use an electronic scale. RCBS 5-0-5 minimum. The lee safety scale works but it's slow with no dampening.
is the RCBS m500 the newer model for the 5-0-5?
IMO everyone needs a decent quality beam scale even if they also use an electronic scale. RCBS 5-0-5 minimum. The lee safety scale works but it's slow with no dampening.
correct me if im wrong guys, but looking into this issue, it looks like the most accurate way to weight charges is with a good old mecanical beam scale. Despite being longer, it looks more accurate. It is also not that longer if you consider all the rezeroing and restarting and pissing around an electronic scale seems to involve...
is the RCBS m500 the newer model for the 5-0-5?
I have ask similar in the past and received several good advice how to prevent my cheap hornady gs-1500 scale f***ness.
I now reload without my cellphone, door is closed and there is no neon light in the basement. But it seems to be a hit and miss. Sometimes it will weight the cup at 128,4-5 and stay there once tared but other times it will weight in at 128,4-5 and once tared it will eventually drift up to 128,6-7-8 or down to 128,3-2.
It pissed me off and I want to throw it on the wall but then I won't be able to reload for a while.
Tonight it did drift several times. I stoped, went upstairs and had a shower and changed clothes (static electricity?) and went back downstairs for more reloading. It did fine for 10 minutes then started to f___ arround again.
Are there any other ways to prevent this very frustrating phenomenon (other then buying a new scale) and are all electronic scale prone to this problem?
Forgive my ignorance fellas, but how does fluorescent lights or a cell phone affect the scale?
I don't know precisely why the fluorescent lights affect electronic scales, but from personal experience I've found that they do - at least to some degree or another. A recent post in this same reloading section asked about RCBS Chargemaster, Hornady Lock 'n Load dispenser, etc. My post on that subject mentioned the fluorescent lights - I was getting some variation with my Chargemaster digital scale/dispenser until I figured it out, hung some LED shoplights above the bench and turned off the fluorescent lights in the basement where my bench is. An electrical engineer working for the same employer as me mentioned an electro-magnetic field from the ballast - unless a shielded ballast unit the field can raise hell with electronics. Which makes sense on the face of it.
Here's the link to that thread, I believe another poster made reference to the same issue as well. https://www.canadiangunnutz.com/for...arge-Powder-Dispenser?p=13648091#post13648091
O.N.G.



























