I think a lot of the frustration in measuring flaky powders like Unique and Red Dot comes from weighing individual charges during the set-up process. The remedy is: Do not weigh individual charges. Throw ten charges into the pan and weigh the total. The average of ten charges gives a much better idea of the current measure setting and a much better idea of the adjustment necessary to get you where you want to be. It doesn't take that much time.
I wanted to make up some loads for .38 Sp. using 3.8 grains of Unique. After setting a Lee Perfect measure for this, I threw 5 sets of ten charges each and weighed them on a DS-750 digital scale. The weights were: 38.4; 38.6; 39.0; 38.4, and 38.6 grains, showing very good long-term stability of the charges for Unique in this measure. Of course, there is still load–to-load variation in the charges and this should be minimized by keeping the hopper full and the powder well-settled in it.
I then threw 20 charges in primed cases and loaded Penn 148-gr DEWCs on top. No check weighing, but all were eyeballed to make sure of a charge. At the range with my Model 14, these rounds averaged 969 fps with a spread of 54 fps and an average deviation of 13 fps. Accuracy was plenty good for plinking and informal target work.
I wanted to make up some loads for .38 Sp. using 3.8 grains of Unique. After setting a Lee Perfect measure for this, I threw 5 sets of ten charges each and weighed them on a DS-750 digital scale. The weights were: 38.4; 38.6; 39.0; 38.4, and 38.6 grains, showing very good long-term stability of the charges for Unique in this measure. Of course, there is still load–to-load variation in the charges and this should be minimized by keeping the hopper full and the powder well-settled in it.
I then threw 20 charges in primed cases and loaded Penn 148-gr DEWCs on top. No check weighing, but all were eyeballed to make sure of a charge. At the range with my Model 14, these rounds averaged 969 fps with a spread of 54 fps and an average deviation of 13 fps. Accuracy was plenty good for plinking and informal target work.