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Tell us about the one that got away, the flier that ruined your group, the zero that drifted, the shot you still see when you close your eyes. Winner will receive a free scope!
Join contestflounderv2 said:The disc powder measure that comes with it is not consistent at all for precision ammo. I use a scale for every one of my precision charges and mainly use the powder dispenser for AR plinking ammo. </div></div>
I agree that measuring individual charges with a beam balance is the most accurate way to load but my auto disk is pretty damn accurate and crazy fast. Just out of curiosity I threw 10 consecutive charges each of my varget 223 and 308 loads checking them with my rcbs 502 and got these results:
223: 21.8, 21.7, 21.7, 21.8, 21.8, 21.7, 21.8, 21.7, 21.8, 21.9, 21.8, 21.7
308: 44, 44, 44, 44, 44, 43.7 ,43.9 ,43.9 ,44, 44.1
As with any meter, consistency of stroke is king, but I trust this measure to throw to about .2 grains accuracy. I don't doubt the 43.7 was my fault.
Basically if I was shooting comps I'd probably use a single stage and measure my charges by hand, but for producing practice ammo the Lee kit is worth using for the time savings. </div></div>
Ive gotten completely different results. Honestly I cant see how you can get that type of accuracy with a powder that has the dimensions such as varget. With a much more fine powder yes but Ive been over 1 grain off with the disk measure using varget. Same with 4831SC.
flounderv2 said:The disc powder measure that comes with it is not consistent at all for precision ammo. I use a scale for every one of my precision charges and mainly use the powder dispenser for AR plinking ammo. </div></div>
I agree that measuring individual charges with a beam balance is the most accurate way to load but my auto disk is pretty damn accurate and crazy fast. Just out of curiosity I threw 10 consecutive charges each of my varget 223 and 308 loads checking them with my rcbs 502 and got these results:
223: 21.8, 21.7, 21.7, 21.8, 21.8, 21.7, 21.8, 21.7, 21.8, 21.9, 21.8, 21.7
308: 44, 44, 44, 44, 44, 43.7 ,43.9 ,43.9 ,44, 44.1
As with any meter, consistency of stroke is king, but I trust this measure to throw to about .2 grains accuracy. I don't doubt the 43.7 was my fault.
Basically if I was shooting comps I'd probably use a single stage and measure my charges by hand, but for producing practice ammo the Lee kit is worth using for the time savings. </div></div>
Ive gotten completely different results. Honestly I cant see how you can get that type of accuracy with a powder that has the dimensions such as varget. With a much more fine powder yes but Ive been over 1 grain off with the disk measure using varget. Same with 4831SC.
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I was pretty surprised with the accuracy especially, as you said, with a stick powder like Varget. It should and does throw in a jumbled mess, but I guess my technique results in a consistent jumble throw to throw. I just make sure my throw feels consistent between loads and dump any that don't feel right. One thing that is a must for me using the autodisk with varget is to throw and dump the first few charges when I start loading, either after I load the hopper or have left it sitting with powder in it. The first loading generally gives a light charge and if you leave the hopper sitting loaded it'll throw a heavy charge because the powder has had a chance to settle with bumping the table and whatnot.
Something else worth mentioning that should work against me but doesn't, is that I don't use the double stack disks. I throw 3 times with the 1.09 disk (which is 14.6gr) for my 44gr charge with no problems.