Have a handful of different powders. Am getting back into reloading after a few decades' hiatus. So please forgive the "noob" type question, here, as it's been awhile.
My question is: How does everyone most-effectively get a powder charge, with a fairly hard-to-meter grain shape/size?
Have a RCBS ChargeMaster 1500, for the good-metering powders. But with a longer extruded powder, such as IMR 4350 for example, the scale usually goes several tenths of a grain over the intended charge. (Dumps several kernals rapidly, when trying for that final 0.1gr to 0.2gr.)
Assuming a different powder's unavailable, do people simply use the auto metering to 1-2 grains less than intended, then use a separate manual trickler to eke out the last grain's worth?
IMR 8208 XBR meters well. Hodgdon Superformance does, too, even better, given it's nearly microscopic ball/grain size. But fairly long extruded powders don't seem to be consistently on-target for the weight, with the RCBS ChargeMaster 1500.
My question is: How does everyone most-effectively get a powder charge, with a fairly hard-to-meter grain shape/size?
Have a RCBS ChargeMaster 1500, for the good-metering powders. But with a longer extruded powder, such as IMR 4350 for example, the scale usually goes several tenths of a grain over the intended charge. (Dumps several kernals rapidly, when trying for that final 0.1gr to 0.2gr.)
Assuming a different powder's unavailable, do people simply use the auto metering to 1-2 grains less than intended, then use a separate manual trickler to eke out the last grain's worth?
IMR 8208 XBR meters well. Hodgdon Superformance does, too, even better, given it's nearly microscopic ball/grain size. But fairly long extruded powders don't seem to be consistently on-target for the weight, with the RCBS ChargeMaster 1500.