Dennis, I think weighing bullets isn't really what you want to do; I think you want to cull the fringe bullets outside of an acceptable weight variance. For that, I think the beam scale is fastest.
Set it to the weight you want, and put a bullet on the pan. Those outside the gradations nearest to dead nuts get tossed into two containers: heavier and lighter. Those within the acceptable range go into a specific container for them.
However, if you are obsessed with 0.1 grain for every bullet, then heaven help you. There's no end to stuff once you start measuring. You'll go crazy.
Articles have been written by credible and accomplished shooters on how they mistakenly used their culled loads/bullets/brass whatever to shoot an important match. And noticed no difference vs. the ammo that was painstakingly measured within a gnat's ass. There's a lesson there. Unless you like to measure, in which case go crazy and enjoy yourself.
Set it to the weight you want, and put a bullet on the pan. Those outside the gradations nearest to dead nuts get tossed into two containers: heavier and lighter. Those within the acceptable range go into a specific container for them.
However, if you are obsessed with 0.1 grain for every bullet, then heaven help you. There's no end to stuff once you start measuring. You'll go crazy.
Articles have been written by credible and accomplished shooters on how they mistakenly used their culled loads/bullets/brass whatever to shoot an important match. And noticed no difference vs. the ammo that was painstakingly measured within a gnat's ass. There's a lesson there. Unless you like to measure, in which case go crazy and enjoy yourself.
