mine is plugged into a surge protector... i shut the scale off after each session... when i turn it on and sit the pan on it if it doesnt have the right number on it i recalibrate it... if it does have the right number i carry on... sometimes even after recalibrating it the weight of the pan is off .02... when it does that if i wipe the pan out good it goes back to the number im looking for... i guess the pan can get enough powder residue on it to throw it off .02... cant see it on there but it makes a difference wiping the pan out...
I have two of the FX120i scales and I have learned a lot using them. First - get your cell phone away from them - it will cause drift. Second shut off the TV - it will cause drift. Third - get rid of your fluorescent lights - they will cause drift and LED's won't. Fourth make sure you don't have any cobwebs or dust bunnies under the scale - they will cause drift. Fifth buy a line conditioner as it will help. Lastly tell the wife to shut off the dishwasher that sits upstairs, directly above your reloading bench - it will cause drift. The mentioned items will cure 99% or the drift issues or at least did for me. These scales are very accurate but are also very sensitive.
Clean power source is the answer. Just my two cents. Tommy Mc
I have two of the FX120i scales and I have learned a lot using them. First - get your cell phone away from them - it will cause drift. Second shut off the TV - it will cause drift. Third - get rid of your fluorescent lights - they will cause drift and LED's won't. Fourth make sure you don't have any cobwebs or dust bunnies under the scale - they will cause drift. Fifth buy a line conditioner as it will help. Lastly tell the wife to shut off the dishwasher that sits upstairs, directly above your reloading bench - it will cause drift. The mentioned items will cure 99% or the drift issues or at least did for me. These scales are very accurate but are also very sensitive.
I don't calibrate my FX120 hardly ever. I hit the on button, let it sit for 10 or so minutes while I prep other things and right before I start, I place my 50g calibration weight on the scale. I think I can recall one time that it read 49.99 instead of 50.00, requiring a re-calibration. When your pan weighs something different, have you tried your 50g cal weight to see if it still weighs correctly? Do you have an indicator or mark on the platten so that you always place your pan in the same spot?
I have a single 2 gram test weight. At 30.865grains, it’s about the weight of a PPC or BRA charge.Thus, an appropriate calibration set might include weights of 1 g, 2 g, and 5 g. Calibrating a powder balance with only a 100 g or a 0.01 g weight in such a case would not be ideal, although it would certainly be better than not calibrating it at all.