Re: Weighing ammunition
i used to use an old (but accurate) balance beam, took WAY to long for it to stop bobbing up and down.
i picked up a digital, frankford arsenal one on sale for under $50. which picked up the speed, and measured against the balance beam, is pretty accurate. drawback is that it is battery operated, but there are ones that have an AC adapter. the good thing about having the battery operated though, is that you can take it with you on the porch, or watching tv while weighing ammo.
i really don't believe you have to dump a large sum of money on one, just make sure it has a grain option.
like badbot said, put a bullet on it, zero out the scale, start seperating by tenths. i like to put little pieces of paper at each pile with the weight written on it just to keep things less confusing. i originally grouped together three or four tenth weights together as an "accurracy lot" but i've found it's better to completely break them out into tenths. the few extreme weighted stragglers that are too few to even get a complete box of ammo i use as foulers.
on a seperate but related topic, i put together a homemade rimthickness gauge:
http://www.snipershide.com/forum/ubbthre...140#Post1753140
and i'm hoping that tomorrow will be fair enough weather to test out rim thickness vs. weight.
so far, the numbers are telling me that there is more variation in weight than rim thickness, got to see on paper which one produces better groups / consistancy for me. using match ammo and 2 types of bulk stuff.
i did the weight and rimthickness seperation, but took so long and produced so many ammo groupings, i'd just be better buying wolf with not having to do much of anything to it except load a mag and shoot. that stuff is really consistant in rim thickness and weight, which obviously explains why it shoots so darn good through just about any rifle.
thanks for the mention in your post.