OK, I used to use an RCBS powder pro dispenser & scale. Drop a charge, weigh it and get it perfect on a 5-0-5 scale and then drop it into the case. Took about an hour for each box of loads. If I was just going to use it for plinking I would just use the powder pro, but found it to be poorer quality and it didn't handle H110 because its such a fine grained powder.
Lately, I've developed the bad habit lately of zeroing my digital scale with a primed case on it and dropping a charge directly into the case from the powder dispenser and then weighing it again. Just tapping a bit out of the case into the hopper or tapping in a bit from a different sized case full of the same powder.
It seems to work like a darn, but I'll try some more of those loads again to make sure it isn't just coincedence. I am not to sure this is a good practice, but sure makes a box of loads happen fast. I will test this method a bit more and see if it produces accurate loads in my target rifles. Until now I have using this method in my 44 mag, 223 and a bit in my 264 with really slow powder(where the charge difference isn't as noticable.
What do you guys figure. I am very careful to do things in the same order every time to make sure the case gets zero'd before I charge it and then get it to weigh correctly after. I am not totally convinced that this method is acceptable, but am very happy with the production time. I realize that the production time for poor ammo is not important, but that quality ammo that can be produced quickly is a great thing.
JT.
Lately, I've developed the bad habit lately of zeroing my digital scale with a primed case on it and dropping a charge directly into the case from the powder dispenser and then weighing it again. Just tapping a bit out of the case into the hopper or tapping in a bit from a different sized case full of the same powder.
It seems to work like a darn, but I'll try some more of those loads again to make sure it isn't just coincedence. I am not to sure this is a good practice, but sure makes a box of loads happen fast. I will test this method a bit more and see if it produces accurate loads in my target rifles. Until now I have using this method in my 44 mag, 223 and a bit in my 264 with really slow powder(where the charge difference isn't as noticable.
What do you guys figure. I am very careful to do things in the same order every time to make sure the case gets zero'd before I charge it and then get it to weigh correctly after. I am not totally convinced that this method is acceptable, but am very happy with the production time. I realize that the production time for poor ammo is not important, but that quality ammo that can be produced quickly is a great thing.
JT.