Canthitshit,
What you just said totally defeats the purpose I can throw and trickle for hours or I can use the quick measure and do thd same amount just as precise in 1/8th the time. Also I own or owned powder throws by hornady, dillon, lee, jds and a lyman . Bottom line if precision and speed are you're goal . The quick measure destroys the others. I would rather spend more time shooting or with the family. However do as you please. Oh and measures that cut powder do have LARGE swings this is common knowledge to anyone that has used one. Maybe it's the jostling of the grains cutting don't know and don't care. I am simply trying to save someone money and time. I wish I had found this year's ago.
And you might be an all-thumbs desk-driving white-collar wannabe "sniper" who can't change oil or change a tire for all I know. Pretending that what YOU can do and do is in any way relevant to ME is pretty damned funny. I'm a diesel mechanic, lifelong gearhead and have been "tinkering" with machines and shooting damned near all my life. So its entirely possible that I might be just a little more mechanically-inclined, coordinated, well-equipped and productive at the reloading bench than you are. Especially when I chose to and choose to reload/handload/cast bullets after jacking with broken and malfunctioning machinery in my "free time". As for things that totally "defeat the purpose", I can only put up your "speed" argument as evidence you don't put a whole lot of thought into ANYTHING you do when it comes to loading/shooting.
So you're all about "accuracy and precision" in your shooting but you want to save time and do things quickly? ROFLMAO. Whatever, Super Sniper. I use a Dillon 550 with 4 different automatic measures, a "pull-type" Dillon measure that like my 550 is probably older than YOU are, an RCBS volume thrower and trickle when necessary. I even occasionally use the little yellow "scoops" that come with Lee Precision die sets since those little volume measures are actually pretty accurate when used with the powders they're calibrated for/with properly. I can charge cases precisely throwing the majority of the charge and trickling the remainder faster than any electronic "automatic measure" I've ever seen online.
I use a "quick measure" when it suits the level of accuracy and precision I want in my charges and ammunition and hand-trickle when THAT works best. Using XBR8208 I've "quick-measured" (with the RCBS) powder charges accurate and precise enough that my home-built 18" AR with a Wilson Combat stainless "match" barrel will put 10 Hornady V-Maxes in less than an inch all day long at 100 yards. And that's with me - not a Super Sniper - doing the shooting off pickup hood benchrest or an actual bench. I'm NOT a great "benchrest" shooter so when my rifles and pistols and ammunition shoot well I tend to believe I'm doing something right loading at the bench and I'm NOT a hyper-picky and precision-obsessed handloader/reloader.
You won't find bushing dies or neck-sizing dies or neck trimmers or ".01 grain" scales or case comparators or any ammunition over SAAMI OAL and tuned to be X distance "off the lands" on my bench or in my ammunition inventor. I shoot and load PRACTICAL rather than "TACTICAL" guns and ammunition. I've cranked out 800 rounds of .223 Remington with 55-grain ammo on a single-stage in one long day of reloading and I've spent hours loading 50 or 100 rounds of "varmint ammo" for a handgun. I reload about a dozen different cartridges from .223 to ,50 BMG including 4 pistol/revolver cartridges with about 15-20 different powders. I convert cases for two of the cartridges I load and have continually expanded my range of guns, cartridges, tools, capabilities and skills since I started reloading after 20+ years of shooting.
I've used a few other measures besides what I currently use and haven't purchased factory ammo in several years for almost 30 pretty different guns and have several dozen "loads" in my inventory and also cast bullets from recovered (with a shovel and sifting screen) range scrap lead. Several of the cartridges I load I own multiple guns in multiple types for and the only cartridge I have only a single load for is .35 Remington I shoot in my 1914 Remington Model 8 and that's fixing to change since I replaced the buffer spring in that rifle and got it tightened up after 104 years of use.
That 104-year old semi-auto hunting/sporting rifle shoots 2-3 MOA with a Redfield "peep" rear sight with the insert removed to make it more of a ghost-ring setup and the factory front sight, 200-grain Hornady round-nose bullets and IMR 4064 and those loads are the first load I ever "developed". I've shot a prairie dog at 75 yards with it from the cab of my pickup shooting from the driver seat through the open passenger window (the benefits of shooting left-handed) so I tend to think I probably don't NEED all the "accuracy and precision" process/equipment that "benchrest" shooters and LR/ELR shooters seem to think are required to make supposedly high-quality factory and "custom" rifles shoot "sub-MOA".
I've loaded "varmint ammo" for guns ranging from 1911 pistols (yes, I've shot varmints - prairie dogs - with a 1911) to my .50 and since there are plenty of "cheap" mass-produced rifles and rifle/scope combos out there in common "hunting" chamberings that come with 1 MOA or better accuracy guarantees from the factory with no stipulations on ammo "type" or "load", I tend to think MOST of the "precision shooting" industry is profiting from the ignorance and laziness of "shooters" who have more dollars than sense eager to run out and swipe plastic to BUY "skill" and "ability" when the latest next big thing bandwagon product comes along.
But I'll keep your wisdom and experience and knowledge in mind going forward.