Gotcha, my first instinct was you were messing around, but I've seen worse questions from people who were serious lolI know! That was a joke. A 10th of a grain threshold is sufficient.
Follow along with the video below to see how to install our site as a web app on your home screen.
Note: This feature may not be available in some browsers.
Gotcha, my first instinct was you were messing around, but I've seen worse questions from people who were serious lolI know! That was a joke. A 10th of a grain threshold is sufficient.

Agreed, I like to settle my weights to the hundredth of a grain, that way I know I'm accurate to the tenth at the very least.One tenth of a grain (is that +/- 0.05grains or +/- 0.1 grains) might not matter in a large cartridge, or when you have found the center of a node that's a few tenths wide.
For smaller cartridges a tenth could break a line on a F-Class target.
This is about 1 grain variance in charge weight for a 22 Nosler.
Velocity from about 1830 to 1995 across a 600yd E-Target.
Seem to have a "NODE" @ 1900 and another @ 1970.
No wind that day
View attachment 1463139
I don't go lower either...If it was my load I'd try to get it as close as I can to 35.650 so the +/- margin of error keeps me in my target tenth (35.6)...Id prefer not to be 35.599 or 35.700, I want to be in the middle of that.I can get 35.596 so darn much when I'm looking for 35.6.
A kernal is .010 so i go with 35.606. never do i accept lower.... Just my thang !
What rubber feet you using? got myself a nice 90 pound piece of granite, and it turns out my bench isn’t levelyou can get granite slabs cheap from grizzly. just put some rubber feet underneath to further enhance dampening. i have no issues at all.
literally just some cheapo amazon rubber sticker things. they are smallWhat rubber feet you using? got myself a nice 90 pound piece of granite, and it turns out my bench isn’t level
That's what I did. I found a "surface plate" online (free shipping) that is an inch bigger than the scale on all sides, added some stick-on rubber feet and it seems pretty stable. My 2" thick counter top is supported on kitchen type cabinets and bolted to a CMU wall, so its pretty solid.you can get granite slabs cheap from grizzly. just put some rubber feet underneath to further enhance dampening. i have no issues at all.
the bench my fx120 sits on is separate from my loading bench but near it. its also fastened to the wall. my powder measure and all the other stuff sit on the loading bench.Gotcha, my first instinct was you were messing around, but I've seen worse questions from people who were serious lol
