http://www.6mmbr.com/gunweek059.html
About the Chargemaster; if you try and use it out of the box, without tuning it and not paying attention to what the display reads when you remove the pan, then yes its crap. However, it can be accurate if you tune it, add a reducer and make sure the display always reads -(pan weight) before dumping the powder. I had an Acculab VIC-323. The SDs I got from using it were no better. it was slow because it was always drifting all over the place (even on a UPS). My two Chargemaster keep the powder flowing as fast as I can seat the bullets and check the runouts.
Now 've never had the inclination to try, but from what I've heard, it is not possible to shine up a turd.
Clearly kombayotch you have never owned or so much as tested a 2 or god forbid 3 decimal place scale, or you are a short range shooter and would not know the difference.
I have personally owned 4 scales, Dillon 1 decimal place, RCBS 1 decimal place, Sartorious 2 decimal place and Vibra 3 decimal place (meaning grains as a unit of measurement). I have compared them all and I could type until my fingers hurt about all the ways ALL 1 decimal pace scales are only good for short range shooting. I have tested the loads and the velocity spreads that result from variations in said loads. Out to 300 yards you could hardly tell a perfect load from a powder scoop. At 600 yards it matters and at 1000 yards it means everything.
The real variation of a 1 decimal place scale is plus or minus .2 grains, meaning a .4 grain variation in the loads. Don't confuse a precise number being displayed on the scale with a precise weight on the pan.
It is not possible to consistently hold 10 inches of vertical at 1000 yards with a 1 decimal place scale under the most ideal conditions.
My Vibra scale can weigh the ink it takes to sign your name and that is no BS, or you guys can line up with our boy kombayotch.
There are plenty of decent 2 decimal place scales for around $300, just google it.
This company sells more than their web site shows. You just have to call them. They have scales from about $150 to $2000 so pick what you can afford. Also they are Canadian.
http://www.walterproducts.com/products-main/balances/electronic-balances/kilotech-kha-series-entry-level-precision-balances
One more thing, make sure the model you pick weighs in grains. Don't confuse G as in Gram with Gn as in grains.