Here is something you might get some enjoyment from.
Someone elses words. Not mine. Copy from another forum. Kenny
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"Gunpowder "burns" by volume. Not weight. Weight is only used because it is easily interpreted and most folks can understand it.
A few years ago I did exhaustive tests on the subject for an article that I never finished writing. In every test, volume was more accurate than weight.
BUT......You need a good powder measure and a perfect cadence to get the powder to drop consistently. For most folks, they will have more "consistency" by weight."
I took two years of college chemistry and three years of college physics, and the person that thought this up should document all of it and present it to the Nobel Science Committee, cuz it truly revolutionizes the laws of Chemistry, thermodynamics, and Physics - there is at least one Nobel prize in it and they can probably get a university named after them...
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This thread caused me to go look at my scale - a Lyman (Ohaus) M5, which makes it at least a century old.
Instead of removing magnets when I first got it, I took out the wimpy magnets and replaced them with monster magnets. It has agate bearings, and hardened knife edges for the pan support.
The scale now does two sweeps before stopping.
It always stops in the same place - ie, there is "0" drag. If it stops and you tap the beam, it comes back and stops in the same place, and it is readable to a tenth of a tenth of a grain.
Sensitivity - I just checked it and it will respond to one particle of commercial 8208 XBR - it doesn't "jump", but after a 1/2 a second, you can see the pointer is a tiny bit higher. A second particle will do the same, and move it a tiny bit more.
I once bought a Redding scale for a second loading bench, and threw it away, cuz it was so bad, I didn't have the heart to dump it on someone else.