Powder measures and such
I could never afford progressive presses with all their marvelous bells and whistles, so my reloading has been done with basic equipment.
For my rifle loads, I used Lee dippers that dispensed slightly less gr. weight than the load I had chosen, then trickled the load to full weight on my scale. Not "efficient" and definitely not fast, but very satisfying to know my loads were consistent.
For my pistols, I have used the little Pacific/Hornady Pistol measure that uses bushings and dispenses consistent amounts, even with Unique. Sometimes, tho, the charge amount published for a bushing doesn't match reality. Best to weigh and know for sure what weight each bushing dispenses, for a good average charge, and I check regularly, and when I open a new bottle of powder.
Recently, I bought a new-appearing full size measure. The fellow that sold it to me had replaced it with an RCBS Uniflow measure. No argument there. Inspecting and tuning the measure, I found the operation to be very rough, so I ran some powdered graphite through it, which helped some. I then polished the drum and body bearing surfaces with FLITZ, which smoothed the operation to what I think it should be. I also found the fellow had installed the small powder chamber upside down. I don't think that did much for his load consistency. Probably reason enough to sell me the measure for a good price. I think I will make a baffle for it, then use it for my pistol loads. I just today figured what sort of a mount I could use.
One can probably better a ".4-.6 grain" variance with the LEE dippers...?
One possible solution would be to drop into a scale pan and trickle (as needed) to the desired weight.
Cheers!
P.S. Although most progressive press users have some kind of "powder cop" to detect missed or multiple charges, one still needs to verify the accuracy & reliability of the drop: I would opine that +/- .1 gr is the usual goal...?
I could never afford progressive presses with all their marvelous bells and whistles, so my reloading has been done with basic equipment.
For my rifle loads, I used Lee dippers that dispensed slightly less gr. weight than the load I had chosen, then trickled the load to full weight on my scale. Not "efficient" and definitely not fast, but very satisfying to know my loads were consistent.
For my pistols, I have used the little Pacific/Hornady Pistol measure that uses bushings and dispenses consistent amounts, even with Unique. Sometimes, tho, the charge amount published for a bushing doesn't match reality. Best to weigh and know for sure what weight each bushing dispenses, for a good average charge, and I check regularly, and when I open a new bottle of powder.
Recently, I bought a new-appearing full size measure. The fellow that sold it to me had replaced it with an RCBS Uniflow measure. No argument there. Inspecting and tuning the measure, I found the operation to be very rough, so I ran some powdered graphite through it, which helped some. I then polished the drum and body bearing surfaces with FLITZ, which smoothed the operation to what I think it should be. I also found the fellow had installed the small powder chamber upside down. I don't think that did much for his load consistency. Probably reason enough to sell me the measure for a good price. I think I will make a baffle for it, then use it for my pistol loads. I just today figured what sort of a mount I could use.