GSPV said:At a given setting, the weight of powder thrown by a volumetric dispenser changes as humidity changes.
The velocity of a given powder charge varies by temperature. The higher the temperature, the less energy loss to the barrel and the more that goes into making velocity.
Velocity is a stand in for exit time. It works pretty well. I wish that I had a way to plot exit time directly.
The bottom line is that if you eliminate the thrown charges, you eliminate humidity as a variable. You can do this in a number of ways. Since I shoot short range, I can use a ChargeMaster on a battery pack at the range.
You can then keep a rifle in tune by keeping velocity constant throughout the day. Pretty easy to plot with Excel using the linear regression function.
You can do the same thing by plotting tuner change required to stay in tune as a function of temperature.
But, hey, I'm just a duffer.
zfastmalibu said:I lived in a very humid state, and moved to a very dry state.
Change in humidity doesn't appreciably change the weight of the powder charge. Note "appreciably".lmmike said:Just for conversation purposes, wouldn't the weight be more a issue with the scale rather than the thrower?
1KBR said:I should have clarified. All of my reloading will be done in my usual basement at home where the humidity doesn't change much. When I was referring to humidity, I meant will the humidity at the range affect tune in ammo which is already loaded. I realise that humidity may affect me if I load at the range as 6 PPC users do with their N133, but I load my H4350 and H4831sc at home.
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I was getting ready to pull up your original post and point this out... I haven't had a tune problem going from my humid area to the dry parts of the country with loaded ammo.