go with my first recommendation.....you will be ahead of the guys with throwers.....[emphasis added]
Unless they shoot better than you. If it were all a matter of finding and buying just the right tool, with shooting development a matter of keeping on the search for the "best" tool -- then blindly using it -- guys like Mike would be Hall of Fame shooters.
Here's a good quote from the gunsmith forum. It happens to be about something else, but the principle's the same:
On some imports since they use some non-conventional thinking and have metric lead screws you need to figure it out yourself. That is what a machinist does, figures it out! The Industrial Revolution came about by early machinists figuring out how to make it....anything...make it. Just cut the first cut in a test piece, then back the tool off slightly and see what other places on the thread dial syncs with that cut.
Al Nyhus has found a way to use his old, old Redding BR3. Unless you count number of posts on BR Central as significant, Al has had a lot more success than most. (Yeah, Mike, that includes you. And me.)
In general, and IIRC, the one thing that some testing discovered was that the weight of the handle on the thrower helped one throw consistent charges. Notice the "helped." Again, IIRC, it should be balanced on the other side of the drum. Very few of us (includes me) took this testing to heart enough to modify our throwers.
Pretty well known is when throwing that first charge any time you set up the measure, throw and discard back into the powder jug about 10 charges. Anytime you come back to it --like after shooting your relay -- throw and put back in the jug about 3 charges. When you throw charges, be consistent. If you move the handle forcefully, always move it forcefully. If gently, etc. If you tap twice at the top and twice at the bottom, do it always. Etc.
I'm sure there are similar issues with a ChargeMaster. For one, there is just going to be some technique involved in getting 31 grains of N-133 in a PPC case, even though that's not your immediate goal. Etc.