Powder Scales

I know this is a repeat, but each time you take you pan off the scale you have a reading.

Calibrate your scale and weigh your pan. Note that, write it on THAT pan.

Zero the scale, take the pan off to charge. That reading is the pan weight. If its not, you have a problem.

If the scales goes off that reading goes off (and you zero again)

Pan weight never changes so you have a calibration check each time you use it.

Each pan has its own unique weight so you do have to find out what that is.

Its a matter of one piece of data and procedure and your eyes, arms and the nuclear holocaust you could cause the gun range is not an issue.
 
505 for me bought a digital ,didn't lie the idea that if you reweigh a charge it isn't the same

Like any tool it does require some understanding.

If you have it calibrated, you put your pan on and the pan shows its correct weight and you zero it.....?

Where it can go side ways is drift. If you remove the pan and the weight showing is not your pan weight, zero it.

I load 50 at a time, I can take any one of those fifty and put the charge back in the pan and it will be exactly to the tenth I am setup for.

Some drift a bit, some more so and bad ones are constant and need to be returned.
 
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