dixieppc
In search of one small hole...
New toy in my loading room.
On the left is my new A&D FX-120i and on the right, for comparison, is a Gempro 250. Shipping label says 9lb 13oz. Big sucker aint it?
I am wading through the manual right now. Unlike most manuals, which are nothing more than a few pieces of paper folded over, this manual is an actual booklet that is very detailed and technical. From first impression, these scales are a heck of a lot smarter than I am.
First thing was to calibrate the scales but they do not come with a calibration weight, you have to provide your own. I have calibration weights but not really sure if they are as accurate as the A & D manual says you need. It says you should use a 100g weight that is within +/- .05g of 100g and you must know exactly how much that weight is (99.95g to 100.05g) so you can tell the scales that.
Even without calibrating it, I decided to check its sensitivity to one granule of varget. First, it has three sensitivity or response settings, Fast, Medium & Slow. Set to Fast, you can't even look at this thing without it registering while setting it to Slow makes it less jumpy but also less sensitive to a single granule of varget dropped into the pan. Medium is hit and miss on catching that single granule.
I threw a few short throws and trickled up to 30 grains then removed the pan of powder and set it back on the scale and it registered within .04 of 30 grains every time. Four times within .04 and six times within .02. Repeatability with a capital R.
One thing extra that I'm going to need is one of the breeze break shields. I want to cut a hole in one of the side shields large enough to stick the trickler tube through and do not want to do it to one of the four shields that came with the scales. I guess I could manufacture one out of a piece of cardstock weight paper, it doesn't have to be clear.
There is a hole in the lid to the shield but that is a pretty far drop for granules of powder and I'm afraid that they will bounce out of the pan.
Anyway just wanted to share my new toy.
Regards....

On the left is my new A&D FX-120i and on the right, for comparison, is a Gempro 250. Shipping label says 9lb 13oz. Big sucker aint it?
I am wading through the manual right now. Unlike most manuals, which are nothing more than a few pieces of paper folded over, this manual is an actual booklet that is very detailed and technical. From first impression, these scales are a heck of a lot smarter than I am.
First thing was to calibrate the scales but they do not come with a calibration weight, you have to provide your own. I have calibration weights but not really sure if they are as accurate as the A & D manual says you need. It says you should use a 100g weight that is within +/- .05g of 100g and you must know exactly how much that weight is (99.95g to 100.05g) so you can tell the scales that.
Even without calibrating it, I decided to check its sensitivity to one granule of varget. First, it has three sensitivity or response settings, Fast, Medium & Slow. Set to Fast, you can't even look at this thing without it registering while setting it to Slow makes it less jumpy but also less sensitive to a single granule of varget dropped into the pan. Medium is hit and miss on catching that single granule.
I threw a few short throws and trickled up to 30 grains then removed the pan of powder and set it back on the scale and it registered within .04 of 30 grains every time. Four times within .04 and six times within .02. Repeatability with a capital R.
One thing extra that I'm going to need is one of the breeze break shields. I want to cut a hole in one of the side shields large enough to stick the trickler tube through and do not want to do it to one of the four shields that came with the scales. I guess I could manufacture one out of a piece of cardstock weight paper, it doesn't have to be clear.
There is a hole in the lid to the shield but that is a pretty far drop for granules of powder and I'm afraid that they will bounce out of the pan.
Anyway just wanted to share my new toy.
Regards....