I had placed an order for the V3 and canceled it when I saw the V4 was coming out. Then got lucky and was picked as one of the beta testers. Definitely a win/win.Just put in a order for one. I have had the V2 in a cart for weeks and then decided to hold off for the V3. The pandemnic hit and never ordered and I am so glad I didn't now because the V4 looks incredible.
Ok, so looking again to ask if in a 6 br, is the range of 34.50 to 34.52 an acceptable powder variation that will not show up on a target at 600 to 1000 yds.Offering some feedback and first thoughts:
Threw some batches of 10 cases at a time of H4198 - shooting for 34.52 grains. Intent was to gauge speed vs. accuracy with the overall goal - less overall time. (i.e. if an overcharge and dump back in the hopper is faster than waiting for a perfect throw). For clarity sake I was accepting 34.50 and 34.52 as a "green light" throw but tossing 34.54 back catch and release.
Speed 5: 1 overthrow (34.60), 5 min 11 sec.
Speed 7: 1 overthrow (34.54), 4 min 3 sec.
Speed 10: 5 overthrow in a row off the bat - stopped as this was obviously going to keep happening.
Went back to Speed 8: 5 overthrow (34.54, 34.60, 34.54, 34.54, 34.56) 6 min. Coarse tube speed seemed right, small tube was too aggressive.
This isn't a fault of the machine, it's pretty clear in the manual that 5 is a default starting point. I just wanted to push it and see how fast we can get to loading 50 rounds. 7 was most def. the best with this powder for me. I think it could handle 7 with a more aggressive small tube speed ramp.
@adamjmac Is this based off of an index or done in a cubical parabola type shape?
As others have noted, reduced sound and ease of cleanout are two very nice features.
.02 is a single grain of powder of Varget. Lots of ways to get it exact if that's what you need or think you need to doOk, so looking again to ask if in a 6 br, is the range of 34.50 to 34.52 an acceptable powder variation that will not show up on a target at 600 to 1000 yds.
My thought is at 600 it may be acceptable but at 1000, it maybe too much. If 1K shooters are weighing primers to reduce variations, that powder spread may be too much.
That said I do have a V4 on order . Just curious what to expect.
If that .02 or .04 is enough for you to notice you either have exceptional world class talent or need to find a new load IMO.Ok, so looking again to ask if in a 6 br, is the range of 34.50 to 34.52 an acceptable powder variation that will not show up on a target at 600 to 1000 yds.
My thought is at 600 it may be acceptable but at 1000, it maybe too much. If 1K shooters are weighing primers to reduce variations, that powder spread may be too much.
That said I do have a V4 on order . Just curious what to expect.
Mostly depends on the trigger puller. Yes, a .04 gr difference could possibly matter in a 6BR or one of the smaller capacity cartridges, but in my opinion, it's unlikely.I noticed in all of the demo's that the overall accuracy of the unit is +/- .02 grains. Overall that is a .04 grain variation. If you are shooting 1000yds , it that an acceptable window of powder weight accuracy? Yes, that variation is going to affect a 308 different than a 6 BR. Guess my question is: Can you see .04 grain variation on the 600 to 1000yd target in a 6mm BR?
The speed of which it operates, the ease of changing powders, the noise level are all minor issues as far as I am concerned.
Ok, so looking again to ask if in a 6 br, is the range of 34.50 to 34.52 an acceptable powder variation that will not show up on a target at 600 to 1000 yds.
My thought is at 600 it may be acceptable but at 1000, it maybe too much. If 1K shooters are weighing primers to reduce variations, that powder spread may be too much.
That said I do have a V4 on order . Just curious what to expect.
I dont have an FX120, but I had a Sartorious .02 grain scale for a while, then I upgraded to a Vibra HT220 0.002 grain scale.Looking at that another way, how are you measuring to .02gns?
That is about the tolerance of what a thousandth gram scale will measure, much less resolve and display. Add in any drift and/or environmentally induced error, and you're over that.
Unless you're using a $1K, .0005 gram or better scientific balance in ideal conditions, I don't think you can say you're actually measuring any better than +/- .02 gns.
The core of my questioning has been related to the level of precision/ accuracy required for weighing powder charges. I presently use a Satorious 503 precision balance and an Omega trickler. It is a combination that weights my powder charges to the third decimal.Looking at that another way, how are you measuring to .02gns?
That is about the tolerance of what a thousandth gram scale will measure, much less resolve and display. Add in any drift and/or environmentally induced error, and you're over that.
Unless you're using a $1K, .0005 gram or better scientific balance in ideal conditions, I don't think you can say you're actually measuring any better than +/- .02 gns.
Ok, so looking again to ask if in a 6 br, is the range of 34.50 to 34.52 an acceptable powder variation that will not show up on a target at 600 to 1000 yds.
My thought is at 600 it may be acceptable but at 1000, it maybe too much. If 1K shooters are weighing primers to reduce variations, that powder spread may be too much.
That said I do have a V4 on order . Just curious what to expect.The core of my questioning has been related to the level of precision/ accuracy required for weighing powder charges. I presently use a Satorious 503 precision balance and an Omega trickler. It is a combination that weights my powder charges to the third decimal.
My BRX loading window has been 33.510 to 33.520 Of Varget. This is a level of precision that the FX-120 is not capable of. Due to the variation in wt. of a single kernel of Varget I usually don’t get each thrown n trickled charge in that window n have to re-throw n trickle. My suspicion is that level of powder wt accuracy is not necessary even to 1000 yds. I ordered the V4 combo to test this out n see if the automated system gives the same level of results I have been achieving.
Overall speed of the reloading process is not really the goal as I rarely load ammo in large quantities against the clock.
That is a correct statement. The Fx 120i can differentiate weights up to 0.015 grains , but due to the display limits it shows as 0.02 gns. So, when when the scale displays 34.52 , the actual weight could be anywhere between 34.50 to 35.54… if you are not happy with that then you would need to move to a sartorious scale with a repeatability of .0015 grains. But now you are in the 2k range…Looking at that another way, how are you measuring to .02gns?
That is about the tolerance of what a thousandth gram scale will measure, much less resolve and display. Add in any drift and/or environmentally induced error, and you're over that.
Unless you're using a $1K, .0005 gram or better scientific balance in ideal conditions, I don't think you can say you're actually measuring any better than +/- .02 gns.
That is a correct statement. The Fx 120i can differentiate weights up to 0.015 grains , but due to the display limits it shows as 0.02 gns. So, when when the scale displays 34.52 , the actual weight could be anywhere between 34.50 to 35.54… if you are not happy with that then you would need to move to a sartorious scale with a repeatability of .0015 grains. But now you are in the 2k range…
Next I loosened the four mounting screws and repositioned the motor very slightly inward, thus creating a little more slack in the belt. This resolved the issue. So basically, when originally assembled, the left motor was too far to the left, and the motor was unable to overcome the resistance of the belt being too tight."
Update - In communication with Adam now. I will share the results...