As many know, My powder charge only relates to Me and My measurement. In other words, as long as the charge I weigh is repeatable and my scale truly measures to with-in +/- one tenth, I can use that scale reliably to to work charge variables to find the load I need for MY gun. (follow?)
If I have my scale set at zero on the bench below eye level (the needle IS at zero from my line of sight), Why would MY measured charge be different than if the scale was set at eye level?
As long as I use the sliding weights on the beam and not the graduation marks of the scale to change my powder variable, How can an eye level scale be "more" accurate?
Am I missing something here or is it simply a personal preferance?
FWIW, I'm running a wonderfull little Hornady/Pacific model M, I've had it 10yrs.
If I have my scale set at zero on the bench below eye level (the needle IS at zero from my line of sight), Why would MY measured charge be different than if the scale was set at eye level?
As long as I use the sliding weights on the beam and not the graduation marks of the scale to change my powder variable, How can an eye level scale be "more" accurate?
Am I missing something here or is it simply a personal preferance?
FWIW, I'm running a wonderfull little Hornady/Pacific model M, I've had it 10yrs.