J
James n TN
Guest
I have the chargemaster and use it nearly every day, I also cut down a ink pen that slips up in the tube of the chargemaster and with the tapered end it got my charges much closer.
Now for a report that is shocking the chargemaster reports consistency to +/- .1 grn that's .2 grns of spread. It may read 27.5 grns but is it actually? I bet 95% of the time its not. I also use a lab grade scale that measures down to .01 grns with accuracy of +/- .01 grn. I use the chargemaster to throw my charges and then dump the charge into my lab scale and adjust accordingly to 1 kernel of powder. I have to add or take away kernals on nearly every charge and yes I have mine also calibrated to speed it up with the settings. That did help as well as how accurate it dispenses, but no matter what the load cell in the rcbs chargemaster just isn't designed for the competitive shooter in mind. +/- .1 grn may be ok in larger cases such as magnums and so forth but when you have .2 grn spreads in sm all cases like the BR and the likes that makes a big difference in ES and accuracy.
Now for a report that is shocking the chargemaster reports consistency to +/- .1 grn that's .2 grns of spread. It may read 27.5 grns but is it actually? I bet 95% of the time its not. I also use a lab grade scale that measures down to .01 grns with accuracy of +/- .01 grn. I use the chargemaster to throw my charges and then dump the charge into my lab scale and adjust accordingly to 1 kernel of powder. I have to add or take away kernals on nearly every charge and yes I have mine also calibrated to speed it up with the settings. That did help as well as how accurate it dispenses, but no matter what the load cell in the rcbs chargemaster just isn't designed for the competitive shooter in mind. +/- .1 grn may be ok in larger cases such as magnums and so forth but when you have .2 grn spreads in sm all cases like the BR and the likes that makes a big difference in ES and accuracy.