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Check Weight Question

Comments

9 comments

  • cnsay
    If you know they are a tenth heavy, mark them and use them. Never heard of anyone check weighing each time the scale is adjusted. May be a bit overkill unless you are doing serious bench rest target shooting.
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  • dcs shooters
    My Lyman 2gr check weights check right on with my Lyman-Ohous scale.
    in fact all the ones in the kit check right on.
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  • RCrosby
    If it were me, I would 't worry about it. There are too many other variable (temperature, bore condition, bullet differences, etc.) to even think about playing with loads where 1/10 grain difference could get you in trouble.
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  • Tailgunner1954
    Like everything else, check weights have a tolerance.
    Short of sending your check weights into a NIST (National Institute of Standards Testing) certified lab, you don't really know what they weigh exactly.

    1/70,000 of a pound of dirt, paint, extra metal, corrosion, etc on a weight will give you your extra .1gr, just like "polishing" them could take away a tenth grain (or more) of metal from the weight

    The primary thing you want when reloading is consistency in your measurements. IE Does 49.0gr today weigh the same as 49.0 did last month, and will it weigh the same thing next month also.
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  • Rocky Raab
    Tailgunner wins the seegar.

    Unless the scale is off by a grain or more, all you really need to know is how to duplicate good loads and avoid bad ones. So (for example) 49.0 grains on THIS scale, with THESE components and in THIS gun are a good load. You can duplicate that at any time, even if the scale isn't perfectly accurate.

    I've come to the conclusion - after a half-century of tests - that a load that varies by ? 1% of the desired charge can NOT normally be detected by the average shooter, whether by velocity or accuracy. The change caused by charge variation is masked by all the other variables involved. Really.
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  • Wolf172
    Thanks for the input. I didn't really think that 2 tenth was any big deal at the volume of powder I am loading but the check weights are a new item I recently purchased and was pretty much just checking things out. As small as the weight is it looks like a lot on the pointer when you are trying to get everything you can as consistent as possible when working up a new load...even if it is just a hunting load. I also purchased a Chrony Beta Master and have never used a chronograph before. Took it out on the patio the other day and shot paper wads through it just to get familiar with the buttons and functions. I am sure I will have lots more questions in the future so if you guys get tired of me asking them just let me know. But I figure it is a good thing to be able to ask people who have "been there and done that" for years and get all the advice I can. May save me some time and money in the future and lots of times little tips or obvious things are pointed out that I never even considered or overlook. Thanks again for the input it is greatly appreciated!
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  • idahoducker
    quote:Originally posted by Wolf172
    I am sure I will have lots more questions in the future so if you guys get tired of me asking them just let me know.

    If nobody asked questions here this forum wouldn't exist. We're all here to learn stuff. I'm sure the most advanced reloaders among us have learned something from a new guys "stupid" question so don't hesitate to ask anything.
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  • Rocky Raab
    You know what? It works both ways. More than once, somebody new has asked a question I couldn't answer without doing some tests - and I learned something new. I've even gotten an article or two out of it!
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  • jonk
    I don't usually even hand weigh charges once I settle on a good one. Variance by +/- .2 gr in any medium to large rifle case doesn't even impact standard deviation much on velocity. Case capacity and bullet weight are going to be off by at least that much anyhow, so hand weighing each powder charge is a waste, unless you sort brass and bullets by weight too.

    Now if you do that and are into benchrest shooting, or shooting at extreme range, then yes it matters.

    Rather my scale is there to get my powder measure dialed in, then I just dump the charges, check one every 10-20 rounds to verify I'm still good, and go from there.
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