How close do others group their pellet weights? I was thinking + or - .1 grains.
I don’t know how accurate my old Lyman electronic powder scale is, but out of curiosity I recalibrated it and weighed the last 13 30 caliber NSA 54.5 grain slugs I had. Every one showed 54.5 gr on the dot..
I don’t know how accurate my old Lyman electronic powder scale is, but out of curiosity I recalibrated it and weighed the last 13 30 caliber NSA 54.5 grain slugs I had. Every one showed 54.5 gr on the dot..
I don’t know how accurate my old Lyman electronic powder scale is, but out of curiosity I recalibrated it and weighed the last 13 30 caliber NSA 54.5 grain slugs I had. Every one showed 54.5 gr on the dot..
How accurate is that scale? Many are +/- a certain amount of grains/grams. Either way, with a decent scale sorting down to 0.20 or 0.30 grains, you will yield better quantities in fewer piles and you won't be able to tell the difference compared to 0.10 grain sorting when shooting.
I don’t know how accurate my old Lyman electronic powder scale is, but out of curiosity I recalibrated it and weighed the last 13 30 caliber NSA 54.5 grain slugs I had. Every one showed 54.5 gr on the dot..
How accurate is that scale? Many are +/- a certain amount of grains/grams. Either way, with a decent scale sorting down to 0.20 or 0.30 grains, you will yield better quantities in fewer piles and you won't be able to tell the difference compared to 0.10 grain sorting when shooting.
No. One gram is 15.4 grains.
I have an old Hornady analog scale that is marked to 1/10 grain. It can weigh 500 grains (just over an ounce) I suspect it is probably accurate (when used as a comparator) to very close to 1/10 grain. It cost about a hundred bucks if I recall correctly, I really don't remember.
I recently sorted a few 350 count tins of .22 FX RD Monsters. The pellets ran from 25.1 to 25.7 grains and head size from 5.52 to 5.56 mm. The vast majority were in the 25.4 to 25.5 grain and 5.54 to 5.55 mm head diameter. There were about 35 to 40 out of each tin that were outside those parameters.
I used to be totally against sorting, but have been burned pretty bad recently by "stray" fliers that I have no explanation for. I'm talking about targets at 100 yards. So even if its only for piece of mind, for big tournaments I'll be going through the sorting routine and keeping ones that look good with no defects and are in the 25.4 to 25.5 grains and 5.54 to 5.55mm head size.
I was a few weeks ago shooting in the finals of a fairly large tournament and had one RDM for no apparent reason go low below the 4 ring in an EBR type target, resulting in a 3 (the other 4 targets in the row were 9, 9, 10, 8). Had that not happened and I'd have shot a 9, I would have finished 2nd. As it is, I was 8th. The difference between 2nd and 8th at RMAC is $9,500.![]()
A friend of mine uses an air gauge. The gauge measures the pressure behind the pellet. The more pressure, the bigger the pellet head. He sorts them in a range of pressure settings (ie 30lb - 40lb, etc). The higher the pressure the faster the fps since more air is behind the pellet. I gauged a tin and my accuracy improved. It didn't matter if I used a larger or smaller head size as long as the head size used is consistent. He doesn't weigh but I think I might be weighing them. I'll probably weigh a sample to see if it makes a difference. So for competition shooting it's wash, lube, gauge, weigh and do a good visual on the skirts.
I don’t know how accurate my old Lyman electronic powder scale is, but out of curiosity I recalibrated it and weighed the last 13 30 caliber NSA 54.5 grain slugs I had. Every one showed 54.5 gr on the dot..
How accurate is that scale? Many are +/- a certain amount of grains/grams. Either way, with a decent scale sorting down to 0.20 or 0.30 grains, you will yield better quantities in fewer piles and you won't be able to tell the difference compared to 0.10 grain sorting when shooting.
No. One gram is 15.4 grains.
I have an old Hornady analog scale that is marked to 1/10 grain. It can weigh 500 grains (just over an ounce) I suspect it is probably accurate (when used as a comparator) to very close to 1/10 grain. It cost about a hundred bucks if I recall correctly, I really don't remember.
Well, I feel like you may have missed my point a bit. I use a Brifit 50 gram scale which has an accuracy of +/- 0.05 grams and reads grams down to 0.001. It reads grains down to 0.01. If I wanted to sort down to say 0.20 grain I can easily do that having the extra zero past the decimal point. Having one that only sorts down to 0.1 would be hard to do the same. This Brifit Digital Mini Scale I use is very decent and stable with easy to read numbers unlike others I have tried, so I will endorse it. I picked it up on AMZ for around $20.
@A-H...A good point about the NSAs not needing any sorting, being they are swaged. I discovered the same when checking my box of them.