My scale of choice is a RCBS M500.
I put a brush bristle stuck to the center line of the body, not on the pointer. You can fit 3 to 5 widths of the bristle on the width of the white center line etched on the balance beam. Too thin to see accurately on naked eye but perfect when magnified full screen.
Use a good quality 12 MP webcam ( Logitech C615) pointed at the scale lines and magnified all the way.
The scale is in a straight line away from me (instead of the normal position).
I make sure that the pan wire hanger sits only on the knife edges and doesn't touch the side stops (keep friction to a minimum).
I make sure that the beam sits only on the main knife edges.
My own conclusion is that scale sensitivity lies on the good supervision of the main beam knife edges and that scale repeatability rides on the supervision of the wire hanger knife edge. I check them for alignment before every round weighed.
On my electronic milligram scale I got the exact milligram 42 out of 50 rounds weighed. The other 8 were 1 milligram over (1 kernel of varget).
I prefer my beam scale over to the electronic one because it will read every kernel. Electronics may need more than one kernel to trigger a response and then provide a sum of the total change.
If anyone wants pics of the srtup, I can post as a reply to this thread.
Just my 10c.
I put a brush bristle stuck to the center line of the body, not on the pointer. You can fit 3 to 5 widths of the bristle on the width of the white center line etched on the balance beam. Too thin to see accurately on naked eye but perfect when magnified full screen.
Use a good quality 12 MP webcam ( Logitech C615) pointed at the scale lines and magnified all the way.
The scale is in a straight line away from me (instead of the normal position).
I make sure that the pan wire hanger sits only on the knife edges and doesn't touch the side stops (keep friction to a minimum).
I make sure that the beam sits only on the main knife edges.
My own conclusion is that scale sensitivity lies on the good supervision of the main beam knife edges and that scale repeatability rides on the supervision of the wire hanger knife edge. I check them for alignment before every round weighed.
On my electronic milligram scale I got the exact milligram 42 out of 50 rounds weighed. The other 8 were 1 milligram over (1 kernel of varget).
I prefer my beam scale over to the electronic one because it will read every kernel. Electronics may need more than one kernel to trigger a response and then provide a sum of the total change.
If anyone wants pics of the srtup, I can post as a reply to this thread.
Just my 10c.