• This Forum is for adults 18 years of age or over. By continuing to use this Forum you are confirming that you are 18 or older. No content shall be viewed by any person under 18 in California.

GemPro-300

I had a Gempro 250. As with most all strain guage scales, it was a drifter. I put it away after a while and got and A&D. Funny thing thing though, I contacted the Gempro factory and told them about the drifting. They asked if I still had the receipt, and as it turns out, I still had it 5 years later.

Since there is a life time warranty on the Gempro, they refunded my money. It's a junk scale, but a classy company.

If you don't have one, don't get one.
 
I had a Gempro 250. As with most all strain guage scales, it was a drifter. I put it away after a while and got and A&D. Funny thing thing though, I contacted the Gempro factory and told them about the drifting. They asked if I still had the receipt, and as it turns out, I still had it 5 years later.

Since there is a life time warranty on the Gempro, they refunded my money. It's a junk scale, but a classy company.

If you don't have one, don't get one.
the 250 is no longer made thats why I thought about the 300,,how's the A&D working out, I just don't need a 5 or 6 hundred dollar right now.
 
the 250 is no longer made thats why I thought about the 300,,how's the A&D working out, I just don't need a 5 or 6 hundred dollar right now.
The A&D fx120 is a magnetic force restoration scale and not a strain scale. As such, the A&D never drifts. Of course, it is quite sensitive to air currents and other such things.

Yes, it's quite expensive compared to a Gempro. That's the difference between strain scales and magnetic force restoration scales.
 
You might check out the bald eagle scale from Grizzly. It goes down to hundredths like the GemPro at about a third of the price.
@SPJ has one, maybe he will give a review.
Can’t complain, it matches my Parker beam scale but it will drift slightly when the wife walks by.
I blame her of course.
Jim
 

Attachments

  • A9177B44-C14E-40A9-9963-238F84150D5D.jpeg
    A9177B44-C14E-40A9-9963-238F84150D5D.jpeg
    196.1 KB · Views: 90
  • D5E135BC-5F87-4D23-8330-68230E77E853.jpeg
    D5E135BC-5F87-4D23-8330-68230E77E853.jpeg
    221 KB · Views: 88
Like turbulent turtle i had a gempro 250 that went south (drifted rapidly). A few years later i claimed it under warranty and got the 300 replacement.
For a reloading scale its not what you want. Mine does not drift ONCE it warms up, but it cannot resolve small changes in powder such as trickling up to weight.
I have some real cheap scales that do resolve single kernel changes, so i primarily use them and then check weigh on the gempro.
The gem pro does weight all check weight consistently to the .02 of a grain, so i would have to ay its accurate, but not a powder reloading scale as it doesnt see minor weight changes required for trickling powder charges.
JMO
Adrian
 
Last edited:
I have a GemPro 250 ( basically the same thing as the 300) and I've kept it as a back-up, just in case my A&D gets to feeling poorly. I've weighed them side by side after calibrating both scales and they're so close to each other that I guarantee you will never, ever, ever shoot the difference. Because the GemPro is a strain gauge scale, trickling up to the desired charge weight requires a different approach. One needs to trickle a bit and perturb the scale - best done by taking your tweezers and pushing down gently on the pan - and let the scale settle on the new weight. This takes some time when compared to the A&D, but it will yield accurate charge weights. I got pretty good at counting the kernels coming out of my trickler when I used the GemPro as my primary scale.

The A&D is much quicker but, if used properly, the GemPro delivers perfectly acceptable precision.

My opinion. Worth exactly what you paid for it .....
 
Can’t complain, it matches my Parker beam scale but it will drift slightly when the wife walks by.
I blame her of course.
Jim
Jim,how does it do on lite loads like 2.9 gr.,,we're loading for PPC competition.
 
2.9 ?
Gosh Dan I never tried that.
All I can say is it weighs everything I’ve put on it very accurately and repeatedly to the .01 gr
 
making me a list.I loaded 2000 rd. 38 spc. wadcutters using a Lyman Microtouch 1500.My friend did good at Raton last week,but we to get a better scale that's why I'm
asking questions.I guess 3rd in somethings are good.
 
I wouldn’t shy away from a Bald Eagle scale especially on sale
 
I have a GemPro 250 ( basically the same thing as the 300) and I've kept it as a back-up, just in case my A&D gets to feeling poorly. I've weighed them side by side after calibrating both scales and they're so close to each other that I guarantee you will never, ever, ever shoot the difference. Because the GemPro is a strain gauge scale, trickling up to the desired charge weight requires a different approach. One needs to trickle a bit and perturb the scale - best done by taking your tweezers and pushing down gently on the pan - and let the scale settle on the new weight. This takes some time when compared to the A&D, but it will yield accurate charge weights. I got pretty good at counting the kernels coming out of my trickler when I used the GemPro as my primary scale.

The A&D is much quicker but, if used properly, the GemPro delivers perfectly acceptable precision.

My opinion. Worth exactly what you paid for it .....

After I got my A&D I checked 10 charges on both scales and they agreed 10 out of 10.

When I was using the 250 I followed a similar process by unsettling the pan to get it to register the change in weight.

Never had a drifting issue. Mine was a good scale and a good value. If the 300 is similar in performance then it could be a good option until you’re ready to step up to an A&D
 
I used the GemPro 250 a lot. Mine was a drifter. Once I learned how to use it I was able to deal with the latency and other quirks. I finally went with the Sartorius 64 with the AutoTrickler. Expensive but well worth it.
 
I've owned both. 300 and 250. I first owned the 300. I found it real slow and too tall for my frankfort trickler. So, sent it back and got the 250 which is much faster. Company had no problem in refunding/replacing. Good service. The 250 is now discontinued. I believe both weigh accurately just the 300 was slower. Like that they weight to the 0.0X gns.

I need another scale and am going to try the Grizzly Bald Eagle, mentioned here (thanx). lg
 
I've had a Gem-Pro 250 for nearly two years now , and it has served me extremely good . Like many things in life , One must follow the instructions provided with the device . It is set up in a room with the A.C / heat duct closed off , with room temp about 80-F ambient , and it stays plugged in 24-7 / 365 . Unless I'm gone for a Match . And I never use it until it has been plugged-in for at least 24 hrs . I did install two of the line filters on the cord , and it is plugged into a line filtered computer bar , ( my term ) . I've checked it against several different , much more expensive scales , and it is never more than a tenth off . Would I like to have a ADi , or a Sartorius ? Of course I would . But I could afford this at the time , and it was a up-grade .
 
I've been using the GemPro 250 for my benchrest loads , it's very accurate , drifting because it's so delicate sound as the grains hit the pan will cause it to drift , all I do after the powder drops is slightly raise the pan and lower it back on the scale and it's nuts on . I wouldn't hesitate to use the 300 for accurate loads . When throughing a charge I can get a accurate 40.80gr. of IMR 4064 or 40.82 if I want . Not made for the heavy handed .
 
Last edited:

Upgrades & Donations

This Forum's expenses are primarily paid by member contributions. You can upgrade your Forum membership in seconds. Gold and Silver members get unlimited FREE classifieds for one year. Gold members can upload custom avatars.


Click Upgrade Membership Button ABOVE to get Gold or Silver Status.

You can also donate any amount, large or small, with the button below. Include your Forum Name in the PayPal Notes field.


To DONATE by CHECK, or make a recurring donation, CLICK HERE to learn how.

Forum statistics

Threads
165,236
Messages
2,191,916
Members
78,770
Latest member
BigDipper
Back
Top