Thanks Blair. I actually have a chargemaster now. When I first got it felt it was a quantum leap above the process I used to use. Chargemaster is not bad but is not great either depending on which powder is being dispensed. I find that with some of the powders I use, I usually have to use it to dump an initial charge then trickle the last couple 0.1 gr by hand. This is slower than I would like and defeats the purpose of having an auto trickler type system.The auto trickler as mentioned above with a FX120i is your best bet for an accurate and repeatable system, still not cheap though. I'm sure you're aware of the RCBS chargemaster and similar machines. I'd say it just depends on your budget. Accuracy and speed increase directly proportionally to the price.
Agreed!There are 2 pieces of reloading kit that I can’t imagine going without, and the autotrickler is one of them. (Giraud trimmer the another)
The FX 120 doesn't drift. It's a magnetic force restoration design.Thanks Blair. I actually have a chargemaster now. When I first got it felt it was a quantum leap above the process I used to use. Chargemaster is not bad but is not great either depending on which powder is being dispensed. I find that with some of the powders I use, I usually have to use it to dump an initial charge then trickle the last couple 0.1 gr by hand. This is slower than I would like and defeats the purpose of having an auto trickler type system.
I like the idea of the Prometheus not requiring a scale that can drift, etc.
-Trevor
That is a great perspective. Thank you for sharing that.Having owned and extensively used both a Prometheus Gen 2 and an Autotrickler/Autothrow combo, I have to say that the Autotrickler is superior in every way. Being 1/4 the price of a Prometheus is a nice bonus.
Thanks for thatTrevor,
I don’t use a lot of different powders, mostly Varget and N140 because I really only shoot .308. The thrower is just a regular Lee Perfect Powder measure though, so I’d guess that any powder that works in one of those probably works in the AT.
I can say that the Prometheus is very sensitive to powder size and shape though, and really only works well with large extruded powders. Varget works well, Re-15 does not. I know this from experience, as I was a Re-15 shooter until I got the Prometheus, but had to switch to Varget because it just wouldn’t work with Re-15. It’s a very precise machine, but it takes a long time to set up and adjust, has a lot of tiny fragile parts, and is really complicated. It’s a brilliant invention, but I think that since the AT came out, it really doesn’t have a realistic place anymore.