pirate ammo
Guaranteed to take the wind out of their sails
is anyone using one and does it work well,good or junk?
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.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 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.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.
Can’t complain, it matches my Parker beam scale but it will drift slightly when the wife walks by.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.
Jim,how does it do on lite loads like 2.9 gr.,,we're loading for PPC competition.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
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 .....
got mine today,going to start working with it this weekend.I need another scale and am going to try the Grizzly Bald Eagle, mentioned here (thanx). lg