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How Much Precision in a Scale is Required for Precise Weight-Sorting?

Great detail, DocCarbon. If I'm reading all of this correctly, I'm coming around to thinking that a scale good for .001 gram (.02 gn.) resolution (like the FX-120i) should be sufficiently precise for weighing cases and powder, although that was my original question. Is there any practical reason for any more precision for cases and powder? With this level of precision, I'm guessing that a group of, say, 10 cartridges all charged to the same weight of powder might, in fact, differ by up to about .06 gr. of powder. So when you charge your 6PPC cases with your .001 g. scale set to 31.0 gr., you might end up with the lightest charge being 30.97 gn. and the heaviest, 31.03 gr. I'm guessing that this level of charge-weight difference would not be accompanied by any discernible velocity differences. But do I have this right?

However, as PracticalTactical has noted, this level of precision would be completely inadequate for weighing primers. For this, I'm assuming that you would have to go to the .0001 gram (.002 gn.) scales. Unfortunately, this gets you into pretty pricey territory. Is there a .1 mg. scale that is as affordable as the FX-120i?


I can honestly tell any of you , 50 years ago when I batched for Hercules industrial dynamite division and later on for smokeless powder division . There was 3% +,- error allowances . So Today ? who the hell knows with powders being manufactured nearly anywhere but here and as fast as the Yankee Bucks can flow .

MY simple answer is ; What difference does it make weighing a primer ?. Would you be able to decipher the difference in mixture or cup weight . NO !. Primers are held at tighter tolerance perhaps 1-1.5% .

I've personally shot #2 of MY BEST groups with SD in excess of 100 Fps . Granted NOT in BR ,as I NO longer own anything resembling a BR Rifle . Yet groups at 200-500 meters were covered by dimes and quarters .
MY standard group shooting consist of #3 groups #5 Each one fouler ,so 16 Shots first called fouler .

IF and old slug like ME can do that with AR platforms ,for total out of pocket expenses say under $2K ,I'd shutter to think what BR shooters are capable of .

I bought a New Savage LH .308 Years ago ,popped a Decent Nikon on it ,cleaned the bore shot cleaned after each shot ladder stepping 1 clean ,2 clean ,-10 rounds . Cleaned it and fired #2 hand loads , the bullets went through the same exact hole , several people on the line witnessed that ,as back drops or Proofer's confirmed it . I then like a dumbass adjusted the scope for wind . I cleaned it and put it in My safe .

There are so many uncontrollable factors ,which are beyond ANY shooters ability what can you do but the best with what you have to work with . #5 grains of powder in your next round ,have less graphite coating than your previous round . Hope you can see where I'm going with this .
 
this is your problem in reading specs and understanding them\
once again you are wrong...

a fclass target is SEVEN times the area of a br 1000 yard target...not reqally precsion at all..IMHO.
6bra1k, having set national records in both 1k BR & F-Class I think I can comment on BR vs FC.

I must point out the BR target has a 3” X-ring and a 7” ten ring, while the F-Class has a 5” X-ring & 10” ten ring. The FC target rings are only roughly twice the area of the BR, if at my age my math is correct.

Even so, the FC shooter has to wait for the target to be pulled, marked, and scored (while the conditions change) before he can shoot another shot, while the BR shooter can continue to send bullets downrange as fast as he cares to. Also, the FC’er has to send 2 to 3 times (15-20 vs. 5-10) as many shots into his target compared to a BR shooter.

At the TX State Championships last weekend, the Champion Tim Vaught shot a 994-55x out of 1,000-100x. That means only 6 shots were out of the 10” ten rings & 55% were in the 5” X-ring. This shooting was over a 2-day period, shooting, 3 strings on Sat & 2 on Sun and doing target pulling duty between strings. Believe me, the wind & mirage were changing all the time. Don’t tell me equal precision is not required in F-Class!
 
MY simple answer is ; What difference does it make weighing a primer ?. Would you be able to decipher the difference in mixture or cup weight . NO !. Primers are held at tighter tolerance perhaps 1-1.5% .
DocCarbon,

If you track those weight stats, and then weigh the spent primer, you will find a very good correlation to those differences being caused by the pellet charge and not the cup and anvil.

My comments are not to be construed as advice to weight sort or not to sort. YMMV
 
You do not need a high degree of accuracy to sort cases and bullets. An scale or balance that can that can weight plus or minus 0.1 grain is all that is needed.
 
6bra1k, having set national records in both 1k BR & F-Class I think I can comment on BR vs FC.

I must point out the BR target has a 3” X-ring and a 7” ten ring, while the F-Class has a 5” X-ring & 10” ten ring. The FC target rings are only roughly twice the area of the BR, if at my age my math is correct.

Even so, the FC shooter has to wait for the target to be pulled, marked, and scored (while the conditions change) before he can shoot another shot, while the BR shooter can continue to send bullets downrange as fast as he cares to. Also, the FC’er has to send 2 to 3 times (15-20 vs. 5-10) as many shots into his target compared to a BR shooter.

At the TX State Championships last weekend, the Champion Tim Vaught shot a 994-55x out of 1,000-100x. That means only 6 shots were out of the 10” ten rings & 55% were in the 5” X-ring. This shooting was over a 2-day period, shooting, 3 strings on Sat & 2 on Sun and doing target pulling duty between strings. Believe me, the wind & mirage were changing all the time. Don’t tell me equal precision is not required in F-Class!
I'll add to this that the F Class scoring rings are round... Meaning fattest along the center horizontal line.

If you get vertical dispersion of 1/2 MOA then at the top and bottom of the scoring range, there is a more narrow tolerance for wind. So unless you can hold under 1/4 MOA vertical you are likely to leak Xs or Vs, depending on the country out the corners.
 
You do not need a high degree of accuracy to sort cases and bullets. An scale or balance that can that can weight plus or minus 0.1 grain is all that is needed.
YOUR OPINION, but i dount you are a competitive lr br shooterfor hunting and maybe large steel plates NOT FOR LONG RANGE BENCHREST
 
DocCarbon,

If you track those weight stats, and then weigh the spent primer, you will find a very good correlation to those differences being caused by the pellet charge and not the cup and anvil.

My comments are not to be construed as advice to weight sort or not to sort. YMMV
Understood but the point is after the fact of ignition and it does what ?.

There are all sorts of factors beyond the control of the operator ,wisdom dictates minimizing as many as possible but perfection IF obtained ISN'T repeatable . So we do the best we can and perhaps ask for a small favor here and there ; Sometimes it's granted and sometimes it falls upon deaf ears :)
 
6bra1k, having set national records in both 1k BR & F-Class I think I can comment on BR vs FC.

I must point out the BR target has a 3” X-ring and a 7” ten ring, while the F-Class has a 5” X-ring & 10” ten ring. The FC target rings are only roughly twice the area of the BR, if at my age my math is correct.

Even so, the FC shooter has to wait for the target to be pulled, marked, and scored (while the conditions change) before he can shoot another shot, while the BR shooter can continue to send bullets downrange as fast as he cares to. Also, the FC’er has to send 2 to 3 times (15-20 vs. 5-10) as many shots into his target compared to a BR shooter.

At the TX State Championships last weekend, the Champion Tim Vaught shot a 994-55x out of 1,000-100x. That means only 6 shots were out of the 10” ten rings & 55% were in the 5” X-ring. This shooting was over a 2-day period, shooting, 3 strings on Sat & 2 on Sun and doing target pulling duty between strings. Believe me, the wind & mirage were changing all the time. Don’t tell me equal precision is not required in F-Class!
closer to 3x on the xring 7,07 vs 19.6
i was misremebering the mil target not the f, my bad
and the wind blows at 1k br matches too,
BUT we to not get shoots spotted. all is an educated guess once time starts.
bottom line you do not need the precsion that br shooters do at 1k.
the problem with your numbers is you do not measure the group or score of the first 5 or 10 shots.
it is a different game but it aint as precise
 
Understood but the point is after the fact of ignition and it does what ?.

There are all sorts of factors beyond the control of the operator ,wisdom dictates minimizing as many as possible but perfection IF obtained ISN'T repeatable . So we do the best we can and perhaps ask for a small favor here and there ; Sometimes it's granted and sometimes it falls upon deaf ears :)
I'm mostly in agreement, but will just add a parting thought and leave the rest to the forum and readers, while begging your indulgence to expand on your point if you are saying a typical 0.1 gr scale isn't adequate for brass sorting.

There tends to be controversy surrounding concepts such as the tolerance of brass weight (or volume) to have a significant difference on target. After all, that is the heart of the matter with this forum so it is the right place to spend time on it.

The controversy happens when it takes significant resources or barrel life to prove a point, and since most reading here are not the Fortune 500 or trust fund babies, we are stuck with certain controversies due to physics, the difficulty of setting up definitive tests, and the budgets it takes to run them. That said, I think we can do a better job of being clear for the sake of the beginners.

When it comes to records and state of the art shooting, beginners reading here are not always BR shooters or familiar so it is up to folks like you and I to steer their development concepts. We need to keep in mind we have to cater to all of them, the rookies with their first box stock RPR, and the experienced Master who is trying to make it to the podium at a national or international level. Good ballistics discussions can often serve both types at the same time, or at least build the reference frame for state of the art and what that takes, even if the answer cannot be applied universally.

When it comes to primers, the total weight is so much lower than typical case weights, that I tried to steer the thread away to avoid boiling the ocean over too many conflicting tolerance requirements.

The title of the thread and the later details within the OP's first post were not lined up well, so the aim point of the question started with the question of case sorting and before we came to any good conclusions, we quickly digressed into all sorting and the significance or insignificance of primer sorting and single kernel loading.

While I highly value the opinions of highly accomplished competitive shooters, we run the risk of turning off the beginners when threads wander and go down rabbit holes where evidence is scant because it requires state of the art science and big budgets to be definitive.

When some of us are still solving the case sort question and others are off into the definition of calibration and tolerance of primers, things get drawn out and muddy with conclusions on none of those.

We may or may not all agree on this, but I will back up a level higher to before the cause for the question in the first place... and state that the reason this comes up is that things like bullets, powder, brass, and primers are all made with tolerances that can and do cause problems from time to time when the topic is state of the art accuracy performance.

If someone isn't shooting for state of the art in BR or highpower competition, then they should frame their answers in context, and the opposite is also true in that some advice is based on extreme accuracy requirements. Sometimes, we just don't have the budgets or enough data to answer their questions or the data is proprietary and not to be published due to legalities.

If we focus on just the brass, we all (I should say some of us) know that even Lapua isn't perfect for all purposes or from time to time. Many batches of Lapua have checked out good, yet others seem to be escapes. It is a damn sight better to start with Lapua as an example, but the reason we might sort it and when we say it needs to be better is getting muddy here.

I will go on the record and tell you primers have been just as vulnerable to escapes as bullets and brass, but thank the stars it is rare.

Taking a good batch and using that to prove the bad ones are also good isn't good advice. To be fair, not everyone has tracked primer weights (or bullets or cases either), so if you have been blessed to never have seen a bad batch good for you. My advice to beginners is to be prepared to establish your own criteria, but that starts with knowing when you are just lucky versus screening for the eventual escapes.

That circles us back to the age old question of advice. I suggested early that a scale to detect if brass even needs sorting can be a typical inexpensive 0.1 gr scale. If I am wrong then I would assume someone with even better data should be able to say that a sort finer than the typical uncertainty of a 0.1 grain scale needs to be better because of XYZ, etc. and point out a topic or context where a sort bin of less than 0.3 grains makes a difference on target, and therefore the answer to the scale question becomes clear.

I am not calling you or anyone else out and apologize if it comes off that way cause it is certainly not my intention, just suggesting we get the thread back on tracks to at least solve the first question the OP asked without drift into powder kernels and primers.

Those other components are important enough to warrant their own thread in my opinion. And, because I am still interested in hearing your point on if a lab grade scale with better than 0.1 grains is needed for brass sort for something I am unaware of. YMMV.
 
Well, unfortunately, I flunked Measurement and Inspection 101, so what does .02-grain readability in a scale mean in terms of likely weight dispersion in a group of powder charges? Put more concretely, say I weigh 10 charges with this scale hoping for charge weights of exactly 31.0 grains. How much difference is there likely to be between the heaviest charge and the lightest, given the .02-grain readability precision quoted for the scale?

Edit. I've just reread PracticalTactical's last post and wonder whether the ± .04 gr. he mentions for the .02-gr. readability scale means that, in a large group of weighed charges--all weighed to 31.0 gr.--the spread might be something like 30.96 gr. to 31.04 gr. So first, do I have this right? And second, is this much variation likely to manifest itself in noticeable velocity variation? Obviously for light charges in the 20-30-gr. range, the effect will be greater than with heavier charges in the 50-60-gr. range.
"Readability" of 0.02 grains means that the scale will display to the nearest 0.02 grains. It will read, 30.98, 31.00, 31.02, etc... So, if the scale shows 31.00 the actual weight is somewhere between 30.98 and 31.02. The scale can only "resolve" 0.02grains.

"Repeatability" is the expected variation if one were to measure the same part over and over... so, if the repeatability were +/- 0.02 and the part were 31.00 grains (true weight) measuring the part over and over one would expect to see a range of results between 30.98 and 31.02.

Taking into account the readability of 0.02 and repeatability of 0.02, if the part true weight were 31.11 and you measured it over and over the results would be 31.09 to 31.13, but the scale would show 31.08 to 31.12 or worse case, 31.08 to 31.14.
 
Isn't case water capacity a better characteristic to sort on - rather than weight? Added weight around the extractor groove would change nothing in the brass performance, but might lead to sorting for the wrong thing. Internal volume would directly impact pressure vs charge weight... Or at least verify that there is in fact an internal volume difference in the "buckets of cases" - check the water capacity of the highest vs lowest weight cases... Just a thought.
 
Isn't case water capacity a better characteristic to sort on - rather than weight? Added weight around the extractor groove would change nothing in the brass performance, but might lead to sorting for the wrong thing. Internal volume would directly impact pressure vs charge weight... Or at least verify that there is in fact an internal volume difference in the "buckets of cases" - check the water capacity of the highest vs lowest weight cases... Just a thought.
If we assume that is true, or even if we don't... the original question is aimed at what is a good enough scale to sort it out either way.

Are the sort bins so tight for brass or internal volume, that they exceed the capability of a typical 0.1 gr scale?
I will add, if that is the position, what drives it? What size weight sort bin are we suggesting and for what case size?
 
closer to 3x on the xring 7,07 vs 19.6
i was misremebering the mil target not the f, my bad
and the wind blows at 1k br matches too,
BUT we to not get shoots spotted. all is an educated guess once time starts.
bottom line you do not need the precsion that br shooters do at 1k.
the problem with your numbers is you do not measure the group or score of the first 5 or 10 shots.
it is a different game but it aint as precise
This is all hand-waving, if F-Class was that much easier than BR, the BR shooters could show up at F-Class matches and clean up. That isn't happening, and here's the reason, which is very pertinent to the whole tenor of this thread: the limiting sources of error are not the same in the two disciplines. Let me state that again, the limiting sources of error are not the same in the two disciplines.

In a 20-shot F-Class match, one might observe changes in the wind conditions that are worth anywhere from 1-2 MOA increased dispersion in relatively benign conditions, up to as much 4-5 MOA, or even more, when the conditions are challenging. Thus, wind-reading becomes the major source of error. The difference between a load that will shoot 0.25 MOA and one that will shoot 0.10 MOA are pretty much meaningless when the wind condition is capable of putting shots out in the 7-, or 6-ring, or even off the target at 1000 yd. In other words, the inherent precision of the load is often no longer the limiting source of error in an F-Class match that is fired over a time limit of 20+ minutes, where the wind conditions can change many times. BR shooters don't generally take 10-20 minutes to get their shots off, hence the difference between the two disciplines. None of that means one is easier or harder than the other, they're just different. Shooters in both disciplines strive for obtaining the utmost precision from their equipment, regardless of what the relative final precision at the target under match conditions may be.

The reason this is pertinent to the OP's original question pertains to actually identifying the limiting source(s) of error, so that they can be dealt with, if possible. For example, identification of a charge weight window that puts velocity within an acceptable window across a specific temperature range, identification of an optimal seating depth window, etc., etc., etc. All reloaders go through this, but some are even more concerned with sorting out the details at the finest possible level or increment. For those individuals, in order to understand when a limit has been reached past which no further appreciable effect on precision can be obtained via a given operation, one must have some knowledge of the limiting source(s) of error involved.

One example of this concept based on the OP's question of "how much precision is required in a scale to be used for precise weight sorting?" would be the sorting of brass cases by weight as a surrogate for internal volume. In order to define the limits of each sorted weight group, one has to know how much brass weight variance corresponds to an internal capacity variance that is sufficiently large to alter velocity to such an extent that it will result in reduced precision. This can only be determined by weighing many pieces of brass AND determining their internal (water) volume. Only then can one get a feel for the relative size and number of weight sorting groups necessary that will provide some benefit to precision, but not go so far that one is simply wasting time sorting to an increment so small that the effect cannot realistically ever be observed. Having done this for many years, I can tell you that in general, there is a pretty good correlation between case weight and case volume. It is not surprising given that the case will expand to the limits of the a given chamber upon firing. Thus, the only major places on a cartridge where weight can vary without affecting internal volume are in the primer pocket and the extractor groove. I personally have never found that variance in the size of either of those two features is sufficient to introduce significant variance into the correlation between case weight and case volume. If I was using a brand of brass where the width or depth of the extractor groove or primer pocket was markedly non-uniform, I would be looking for a different brand of brass. Nonetheless, I have observed that the relationship between case weight and case volume is not the same among different brands of brass. In some, the correlation is much better than others. Further, there will always be a few "outliers", even with the best brass available. As I stated above, the only way to know this is to determine weight and water volume for a number of cases, make a scatter plot out the data, and let the software determine the correlation coefficient of the best straight line through the data points. Having done this for many years, I sort cases by weight into three groups, "light", "medium", and "heavy". Although it is certainly still possible that a "low" and "high" volume outlier could happened to fall within just one of those sorting groups, in general, I am stacking the odds in my favor that case volume will be more uniform in cases sorted by weight. I do not claim it is a perfect solution. However, the good news is that the overall volume range of any of the individual weight-sorting groups will never be higher than the total range for an entire batch of un-sorted cases. So I deem the practice to be worthwhile because it takes only a modest effort.

Another example of how identifying a limiting source of error can be used would be weighing powder. Reloaders commonly test charge weight in intervals ranging from about 0.1 gr to 0.5 gr, in part dependent on the case capacity. Is there any reason to ever test charge weights using a finer increment than 0.1 gr? IMO, no. A change in charge weight of less than 0.1 gr across a pretty wide range of case capacities is unlikely to generate a change in velocity that can even be measured accurately by most chronographs, on the order of less than 5 fps velocity variance, in some cases, even less than 1 fps. Do some reloaders use charge weight increments of less than 0.1 gr? I'm sure there are. However, regardless of the perceived result of doing so, it would be next to impossible to ever prove that it actually made any difference, when current chronograph technology is incapable of detecting such a small effect on velocity. Nonetheless, I have no doubt that those that do it are convinced that it does make a difference. Note that I am specifically referring to charge weight testing increments, not weighing precision of a set charge weight in rounds loaded for competition. In the latter event, I would suggest weighing individual charges to the best precision you can generate. I typically strive for charge weight variance of less than +/- one kernel. Why? Because with a good setup it takes little more effort than does weighing to lesser precision, and then you never, ever have to worry about charge weight variance as a possible source of error when behind the rifle at a match. In other words, for a very minimal effort, I am generating precision in charge weights that is far below any other limiting source of error, so that in effect, charge weight variance ceases to be a source of error. So I weigh charges to +/- one kernel or less for a developed match load, but I typically do the charge weight testing during load development in 0.1 to 0.3 gr increments, depending on what I'm doing. This might seem like dichotomy, but it is not. It is based on my understanding of limiting sources of error as viewed through the lens of how much effort a given reloading step or process might involve. Testing charge weights in increments of 0.05 gr (or less) would require significantly more time, effort, reloading components, and barrel life. Weighing charges for a match to +/- one kernel requires hardly any extra effort at all with the right setup.

So to finally get to the meat of it in what I'm sure has already been an excruciating reading experience for some, how does one actually learn to identify and quantify limiting sources of error in the shooting/reloading process? Obviously, having a background in science, engineering, statistics, or mathematics would be beneficial. However, such a background is not necessarily "essential", and simple experience can be more than sufficient. For example, anyone can look at their charge weight test data and correlate a change in average velocity with a change in charge weight. In my hands, an increase of 0.1 gr charge weight is usually good for somewhere between about 5-10 fps difference in average velocity. Thus, I would be looking at a velocity variance of only 2.5-5 fps if I conducted charge weight testing in .05 gr increments. I'm not going to use my time testing using an increment so small that the resultant velocity change is at, or even below the limit of accuracy with most chronographs. Likewise, one can use a reloading program such as QuickLoad or GRT to predict the effect of a 0.1 gr difference in case volume on velocity with a given charge weight. Although such predictions are not "written in stone", they can provide a rough guide as to whether some given parameter might be a limiting source of error, in which case it might be addressed by tools readily available to the individual. One has to start by learning to identify the [major] limiting sources of error, which can vary widely depending on the cartridge/powder/bullet used. Only then can they determine the minimum resolution necessary for a balance that will be used to sort cases or bullets by weight, or to weigh powder to +/- one kernel, or measure seating depth t0 +/- .001" or less. Sure, someone can list their own specific results at a shooting forum such as A.S. For example, my Lapua .223 Rem and .308 Win brass weight groups end up with a range (per group) in the neighborhood of around 0.5 gr range. So a balance accurate to about 0.1 gr would be probably be sufficient for my purpose of sorting brass. However, someone else's results may differ markedly if they are using a different cartridge/bullet/powder. In fact, a balance that weighs to +/- 0.001 g should be sufficient for most of what we do, if not everything. That is getting very close to the point (if not past) where other features of the balance may be more important than the resolution. In any event, it is always a good idea IMO to learn to make these estimates for yourself. In the long run, you will benefit from being able to do so.
 
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Not anymore. But last century, I used a RCBS 304 beam scale with much more speed and accuracy than you might think!
I use mine in this century. I do have it on an eye level (mine) stand to eliminate parallax.
I have tried a few electronic scales and the groups did not get smaller.
I feel my br rifles are great , I think my reloads are good, the weak link is always me.
 
If we assume that is true, or even if we don't... the original question is aimed at what is a good enough scale to sort it out either way.

Are the sort bins so tight for brass or internal volume, that they exceed the capability of a typical 0.1 gr scale?
I will add, if that is the position, what drives it? What size weight sort bin are we suggesting and for what case size?
According to QL for 6.5CM with a case capacity of roughly 54grains... a 0.1 increase in case capacity would result in about 2fps (for a charge of 42g IMR4451, HDY140ELD)... a 0.5grain increase would result in a 10fps change in velocity.

For a 300WinM with a capacity of ~92grains the results are about the same... 0.6grains results in about 10fps.

So, a scale resolving +/-0.1g would be able to sort brass capacity to a degree that the effect would be about 4fps.
 
I would like to see someone quantify the accuracy of their Water volume testing.
The scale comes into play with either brass or brass plus water but volume includes the meniscus variance.
Before you can establish a brass weight to volume correlation you MUST know how precise your volume can be repeated. I know people uniform primer pockets, but is there an easy to use tool to uniform extraction grooves and rims? That would FIX the weight to volume problem :)


Comment: watch g, gr, and gn abbreviations. Can add confusion if wrong one is used to express a value.
 
Thanks, Ned. As always a thorough and lucid explanation stated in understandable terms. Can you answer one more question for me: If we have a scale that is .02 grains readable, what is the probable range of true weights across a number of powder weighings? In other words, if I'm loading a large number of cases and trying for charge weights of precisely 31.0 grains and have all the weights on my .02-readable balance showing exactly 31.0 grains, what does that translate into in terms of the range I might expect in true actual weights across the large number of cases processed?

If the likely true range is something on the order of .08 grains, then that might be seen as significant. On the other hand, if the true range is more like .04 grains, we might be wise to regard that as negligible and not likely to be accompanied by non-negligible velocity differences.
 
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I'll comment :)
Only you can determine the repeatability of your scale.
Several factors can cause errors with most related to the using environment.
With so many complaints about scale drift, zero drift, and the effects of environment, even with some quality scales, You must prove your installation.
Check weights (accurate but primarily stable) very close to the weight of your brass or charge can test scale repeatability. Two cases of different weights, but very close to each other can be used to test for repeatability.
For example:
A case that weighs (on your calibrated and checked scale) 31.02 grains, and one that weights 31.04 grains.
Repeat measurements until you are confident in the measured values.
You can not throw charge after charge. You must use the same charge (one light, one heavy).

An issue with powder charges not seen in case wight measurement is sensitivity to change.
Some will drop a single kernel of Varget to check sensitivity :)
A 1 or 2 milligram check weight might be better.
 
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