After having problems with verticle over the last few months and not being able to get rid of it at longer ranges, I think I found the cause. Useless bloody electronic scales. I was just loading the last 40 of 300 cases for the upcoming 5 day Queens shoot when I looked inside the cases to double check they had all been charged when I noticed different powder heights. I pulled out the old beam scale and yep, the charges on the last few I loaded were .6gn -.7gns heavier then the 1st few of that lot of 40. This will not be good in the little BR case I dont suppose.
After retesting, it seems that as the scale heats up, it reads lighter and as I load in 39 round lots, the 1st few and last few are .7gns different. I suppose it serves me right for using cheap junk scales, but I checked them a few times, reweighing loads, but only after it had just been started up. I wish I had either just thrown the charges, not weighed them, or that I hadnt seated the bullets on the 1st 260 rounds, but it might be something other might want to check for them selves if they have accuracy problems.
They have Hornady and accusport electronic scales at the local shop. What are these like?
rooshooter,
Electronic scales have a learning curve and it totally SUCKS to have to pull hundreds of rounds that you've loaded by just blithely dropping charges onto the 'lectric scale pan.........BTDT, hated it! 160 perfect rounds for a 600yd match.............pulled 'em all. While I was pulling them I checked a bunch, they were all over the map. This was with a GOOD scale but poor technique.
I've had cheap scales (RCBS, Dillon and Lyman) and frankly I do not think that they're worth having in the loading room. I use my Lyman now for weighing arrows and components in my archery area and have simply gotten rid of the Dillon and RCBS. (I'm not knocking the RCBS Chargemaster here, I've NEVER used one..... It was an older RCBS SCALE ONLY that I used 15yrs ago.)
However...... there was a guy on here a while back offering a special on an MMX scale as well as offering advice on how to use them. Both the advice and the MMX scale are SPOT ON!!!!!
Here's the scale, I have the top one on the page.
http://accurateshooter.wordpress.com/2008/08/19/ten-commandments-for-electronic-scales/ I cannot live without this little gem, it's awesome. I too had the problem you've experienced. I blew some primers..... I blew a 600yd match..... I FOUGHT with vertical for several months all because I didn't know how to run the stupid scale.
I trusted it.
That was a mistake.
The absolute FACT is that these things must be:
--Set up in a temperature controlled environment.
--LEFT in the temperature controlled environment.
--ISOLATED from power surges and stray electrical signals.
--PROTECTED from dust
--Used only in a draft-free room. Close the doors!
--READ the 10 commandments on the web link.
My personal opinion is that furthermore you set them up LEVEL and as much as possible don't move them. If you must move them around do it gently. I do not unplug my scale! I have it on an extension cord which allows me to move it the 5ft from my storage area to me reloading area. I went down to a restaurant supply house and bought one of those 12"X18" donut trays with the clear plastic lid with a handle. I just take off the lid and GENTLY move the thing over to my bench.
NOW..... this is kinda' tricky. The 10 Commandments on the website mention "no vibration". They mean it! DO NOT dump your loads and then tap them onto the bench top to settle the compressed loads! I have a fairly luxurious reloading room and part of my setup includes a section of bench that is set on rolling casters.....this whole 6" section of heavy bench can be rolled out of the work area for use elsewhere in the room/building. In normal use this bit of my benches looks just like the rest, the crack in the tabletop is only 1/8" wide. But the rolling section is totally separate from the bench on both sides. My benches are 2" thick plywood, HEAVY and STOUT and setting on concrete. If I set the scale on this surface and tap my cases a foot away the scale bounces! The display goes +- maybe .02gr.
What I do is set up right on the crack....the scale sets on one bench while the "tapping area" is on the adjoining bench surface. The two benches are not connected together in any way.
Or, I just don't tap, I make up a longer drop tube.
Right now my MMX has been in the room for over a year and I can pick up the cake pan that I keep it in, move it to where I want to load, turn it on for 10min and go to town.....I normally weigh 4-5 charges and dump them back just to "lube up the works" and I ALWAYS keep a load set aside for reference and never go more than 10 charges or so between checks back to the reference.
It's a pita I know BUT........ this thing weighs TO THE KERNEL OF POWDER!. My match loads are absolutely consistent to +- one single kernel. And my ES is astounding. It works.
ONE KERNEL of H4350 reads .02gr..........
THIS SCALE is worth every penny to me. But I had to learn how to use it effectively.
hth
al