You always hear some yayhoo talking up that LEE thrower online.
Well, I can only report as I find. Anyway, just what is a 'yayhoo'? - I've been called a lot of things during my 60 odd years on the planet, but it's a first for that one, and we don't hear the term used much in Yorkshire (England that is).
The Lee uses a convex shape rotor in a matching concave aperture in its body. The amount of clearance between the two is critical, and that's adjusted by the amount of tension on the single screw that holds them together. The material of these parts is a rather soft nylon type plastic so they fit well under tension, but get the screw too tight and you can hardly turn the rotor and use the measure, too loose and you WILL get powder kernels trapped between the pair, especially ball powders. The first time I tried one of these measures with a Hodgdon ball powder, yes I got this problem, and yes I wasn't impressed, amused or anything much positive about it. So, I emptied the device, cleaned the rotor and body cavity up and reassembled the tool on the tight side gradually slackening the screw until the measure just operated smoothly if tightly. Refilled with H335 or BL-C(2) or whatever I was using and no more kernels found their way where they oughtn't.
Yes, it's a cheap machine; yes, it's made of plastic; yes, it's far too small; yes, I'm a snob and continued to use my Harrell's 'Premium' even after the test. BUT it worked well for me. Here's what I wrote about the Lee in the feature:
Impressions
Let me pass on my impressions of using the six models, again emphasising the subjective nature of these views. I’ll start with the Lee ‘Perfect’ measure, the cheapest at a few pence under £27. This is a small, no let’s be frank TINY, device which unlike the others is mostly fabricated from plastics of one sort or other. The rotor and its matching cavity in the body are slightly cone-shaped and made of some form of nylon type material, their fit adjusted by the amount of tension imparted by the single securing screw. The trick is to set the tension so that the tool operates easily, but not loose enough for powder kernels to slip between their surfaces which can happen especially with fine-grained ball powders, and requires the measure to be emptied, dismantled and cleaned. A key feature in its success is an ‘elastomer wiper’, a thin soft blade that stops powder kernels sticking. The mechanism is smooth, but doesn’t run as easily as the metal bodied models. You get a thin stamped steel stand which is attached to the measure body using two self-tappers and it’s so thin it flexes as you operate the device. No matter, the elastomer wiper set-up doesn’t need rock-steady support to give good results apparently! Unlike some of our sextet, the measuring chamber is charged when the handle is in the up position and discharges its load when the handle is pushed down. It has a 120° throw, but if you don’t need automatic (progressive press) operation, there is a small plastic stop that can be removed to allow the metering chamber to rise up to true vertical improving performance with bulky powders. This measure is one I bought some years back, but hardly ever used, so was as-new when tried. This degrades consistency as powders deposit a coating of graphite on the internal surfaces during early use that helps powder flow through the device smoothly making its performance even more creditable than the results in Table 2 suggest. Unlike other makers, Lee’s metering stem markings have a use other than simply for referencing settings as they’re graduated in cubic centimetres and you get a list of powder ‘VMD’ values, the volume of 1.0gn powder that lets you calculate a starting setting. If I’d wanted to throw 51.9gn of H. VarGet (the average I ended up with) whose VMD is 0.0731, multiply one by the other and we get 3.79cc, and sure enough that’s where we are on the scale reading. The Lee was one of only two measures that kept all four powder SDs to 0.2gn or below and one of three that produced a reasonable ES with Hybrid 100V. Oddly, it struggled a little with VarGet which most other measures performed best with, but proved to be an excellent performer overall, especially given the price. I only have one complaint about this tool – it is too small. If Lee had made it 50% bigger throughout, or even given it a decent size grasping knob, it would be easier to use.
That was an exhaustive test carefully done with each thrown charge weighed on an Acculab VIC 123 lab-quality scale, trying very hard to get consistent operation in the throw and 'knocking' the measure body twice with a wooden kitchen spoon before each throw.
10 charges were thrown and discarded to settle the measure down, then 25 charges were thrown and weighed and returned to the powder bottle not the measure reservoir as I wanted to have the powder column height and mass reduce as in 'real' use. The four powders used were Viht N140, H. VarGet, H100V, and IMR-4064. Charge weights used were in the high 40s to 50gn
It was recognised that the Redding BR-30 and Harrell's machines were disadvantaged by the powder charge weight as they're optimised for charges weighing around 30gn, so a subsequent test was run for this pair setting them to throw 28gn of Viht N133, and this improved their consistency, the Redding coming out slightly ahead to my surprise.
So far as small dia. ball powders go, I'm running a review of Ramshot products at the minute. They work great in the Harrell, but I've given up using therm in the RCBS Chargemaster - they flow TOO easily and a slight bump against the workbench or disturbance to the dispenser sees balls escape from the trickler tube. Once out they get everywhere and that includes inside the ChargeMaster to places which don't help operation or accuracy!