do you shoot long range benchrest..1000 yards ??Has anyone ever proved that weighing powder to this level makes a difference on paper or in the numbers? I've weighed to this level but never saw a difference. Perhaps I missed something
He may not have done the whole nine yards, but his review is good enough to give a view into the performance of the scale. It seems that he speaks the language and is well aware of what a scale calibration and characterization takes.I agree. You could even Fudge the 50 g cal so something close to your target is linear.
Has anyone seen the full Creedmore specs?
If it reads down to 0.01 grains, total accuracy might not be a "true +/-.01 grain accuracy".
Here's a review of repeatability weighing bullets.
Well, backing out of this conversation.
Just ordered the EJ-54D2 from ScalesGalore for $352.69, shipped.
Someone without check weights might want to consider the extra cost.
Was it hard to type that looking down your nose and all?do you shoot long range benchrest..1000 yards ??
if not you may never know,
but those of us that actually compete in group and score at 1k KNOW what works.
accurate powder measurement is just one part of the puzzle.
he asked a question... I ANSWERED BASED ON ACTUAL USEWas it hard to type that looking down your nose and all?
In general terms you might see a .5" difference at 600 in POI with .1 grain variance. That's assuming your could isolate that variable. At 1K maybe 2" - which could be enough to cost someone.Has anyone ever proved that weighing powder to this level makes a difference on paper or in the numbers? I've weighed to this level but never saw a difference. Perhaps I missed something
Lotta shouting... or, I mean LOTTA SHOUTING.he asked a question... I ANSWERED BASED ON ACTUAL USE
its not looking down a nose...its the difference IN WHAT ONE SHOOTS
Believe the warranty is 1 Year onlyFollowing,
Is there a decent written warranty, since most electronics are not well covered. Most seem to be 1 year then you are on your own if it quits.
Thanks,
Tim
Thanks, I appreciate the info.Believe the warranty is 1 Year only
I got beat at 600 yesterday by .08" and the top 3 groups were within .18" so yes, .5" definitely makes a big difference.In general terms you might see a .5" difference at 600 in POI with .1 grain variance.
Are you saying your coarse powder measurements cost you the match?I got beat at 600 yesterday by .08" and the top 3 groups were within .18" so yes, .5" definitely makes a big difference.
No, I weigh to .02 grain with the FX120. I was trying to say that little things do matter, especially the farther out you go. At 1000 you better have everything as perfect as you can get it. And then there's that that pesky wind thing....Are you saying your coarse powder measurements cost you the match?
I think it depends on how big the node is for your rifle. Some have big nodes and some dont. Also, I don't believe it shows much under 400 to 500 yards. I have had guns, that at a 1000 yards, it showed and I have had guns, where it didn't show much. MattHas anyone ever proved that weighing powder to this level makes a difference on paper or in the numbers? I've weighed to this level but never saw a difference. Perhaps I missed something
i think the 99.99 is way out of placeI am sure it would work fine for 99.9 percent of us
edited to remove snarkiness
I think most competition shooters know how to develop a load so that being off by .1 gns in either direction has a minimal or null effect on the FPS and .01 gns would have no effect on bullet POI. But then being a normal mortal I can't keep my point of aim or read wind effects within .1 inches at 600 yards either like some seem to believe they cani think the 99.99 is way out of place
there is an entire forum for COMPETITION SHOOTERS.
I THINK THE real answer is between 80 and 90% .