dstoenner
Silver $$ Contributor
I have had my Gempro now for a while and it gives better readings than my RCBS 750. But the zero wanders a little just like my RCBS scale. What I do to mitigate it is ever 5 rounds (1 line of my 50 round block) I re-zero both the RCBS scale and the Gempro and go again. But I started noticing that if I loaded the whole block in one setting, I would notice that the "zero" weight with the pan only would get smaller and smaller till at the end it hardly changed.
So I got an idea. Since I turn off the RCBS scale till the next loading, I just moved the pan of the RCBS to the Gempro, zero'd it and left it there till the next time I was going to load. Now I was getting mostly 0.00 grain zero weight and no more than +/- 0.02 when I went to zero it. Like no drift at all. It seems that the circuitry recognizes that there is 0.00 on the scale and it keeps dynamically adjusting to hold zero which then sets up a series of weighing with a stable zero weight. I have now been doing this for a month and even as the temp changes getting hotter in the garage, it is still working.
Thight I would pass this on for you guys with GemPro 250.
David
So I got an idea. Since I turn off the RCBS scale till the next loading, I just moved the pan of the RCBS to the Gempro, zero'd it and left it there till the next time I was going to load. Now I was getting mostly 0.00 grain zero weight and no more than +/- 0.02 when I went to zero it. Like no drift at all. It seems that the circuitry recognizes that there is 0.00 on the scale and it keeps dynamically adjusting to hold zero which then sets up a series of weighing with a stable zero weight. I have now been doing this for a month and even as the temp changes getting hotter in the garage, it is still working.
Thight I would pass this on for you guys with GemPro 250.
David