RCBS 505 with a diy auto trickler attached and an rcbs 10-10 for backup
Lyman M5 balance beam scale. probably older than I am as it was my father in laws before it was mine.
Now A&D FX-120i.
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I had a Dillon terminator for years.
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My set up now- Auto trickler V4
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I have 3 electronic and 2 beam scales. I found the electronic units to be less accurate than the beam type consequently, I use the beam.
Ohaus triple beam that is 50+ yrs old and still perfect weight, just checked a bunch of bullets the other day, bang on.
Lol ! Are you still using a rotary dial analog phone ?
I am reloading 10000 + rounds a year, will spend a year doing so with a beam scale. Electronic scale are used in Labs all over the world and they are very accurate. The FX120 read .01 grain..that one powder kennel…try that with that beam scale..she will not even move with one kernel.
This is now a urban legend - a myth- that beam scale are more precise. It is not true today.
I think this is comparing apples to oranges,
Totally different price point.
For the type of shooting and reloading the majority here does that one kernel won't make a difference.
In saying that, a good clean ohaus made magnetically dampened balance beam scale should be able to indicate a kernel more or less, of extruded powder that is, not a kernel ball or flake powder.
Lol ! Are you still using a rotary dial analog phone ?
I am reloading 10000 + rounds a year, will spend a year doing so with a beam scale. Electronic scale are used in Labs all over the world and they are very accurate. The FX120 read .01 grain..that one powder kennel…try that with that beam scale..she will not even move with one kernel.
This is now a urban legend - a myth- that beam scale are more precise. It is not true today.
I use my Lyman digital to get close, then drop it in the RCBS 5-0-5 scale to tune the charge. Digital scales (any I have used in the past), in my experience, are consistently less accurate than a reliable beam scale. The RCBS scale will indicate individual grains of cylindrical powders and one or two grains of ball. Hard to beat that.
Read post #39 and hang your head in shame. Unless you spend $100k on a digital scale, a beam will always be more accurate.![]()
My rcbs beam scale indicates when I add just 1 kernal of extruded powder. I don't use a trickler at all, I get it very close and then add kernals with tweezers. I know its slow but for the amount I reload it works fine.
Lol ! Are you still using a rotary dial analog phone ?
I am reloading 10000 + rounds a year, will spend a year doing so with a beam scale. Electronic scale are used in Labs all over the world and they are very accurate. The FX120 read .01 grain..that one powder kennel…try that with that beam scale..she will not even move with one kernel.
This is now a urban legend - a myth- that beam scale are more precise. It is not true today.