
gyrfalcon wrote:So basically Dillon was lying when they said the scale is accurate to 0.1 grain... They should say it's accurate to +-0.2gr right?
RAGGED wrote:gyrfalcon wrote:So basically Dillon was lying when they said the scale is accurate to 0.1 grain... They should say it's accurate to +-0.2gr right?
They are not alone, this is true of all of them.
gyrfalcon wrote:So basically Dillon was lying when they said the scale is accurate to 0.1 grain... They should say it's accurate to +-0.2gr right?
1911fan wrote:Ok, a question, is this a case of software, or of hardware.
Are there scales that are set up to "think" in grains first, which is where I see all the problems arising from is not the physical nature of the scale but in the base software that runs the scale as a gram scale and then does the math to convert.
What would it take to 'reprogram" the scale to think in grains first?
are there any ways to fix this?
mitchx3 wrote:Somewhere an ADC converts electrical numbers to arbitrary numbers that are computed and sent out in some format.
gyrfalcon wrote:mitchx3 wrote:Somewhere an ADC converts electrical numbers to arbitrary numbers that are computed and sent out in some format.
I agree that it could be correct or mitigated by redesigning or reprogramming the scales. The load cell or transducer in the scale has a certain resolution, and that resolution is not tied to any specific weight system. The companies selling these scales probably bought a pre-designed sensor unit that was setup to measure in grams. This sensor unit may be completely un-upgradable because the transducer and logic for it is built into a small electrical package.
1911fan wrote:So again my question are there any reasonable priced scales which use Grains as the base unit of measurement.
Seismic Sam wrote:To repeat what I said above, ANY scale that has an accuracy of .01 grams and 0.1 grains is fundamentally flawed in its precision specification, and shouldn't be trusted for a reloading application.
jdege wrote:Seismic Sam wrote:To repeat what I said above, ANY scale that has an accuracy of .01 grams and 0.1 grains is fundamentally flawed in its precision specification, and shouldn't be trusted for a reloading application.
You just need to shoot bigger guns.
If you're loading .25 ACP, the difference between 1.4 grains and 1.5 grains could matter a lot. In a .50 BMG, the difference between 185.5 and 185.6 grains isn't likely to matter at all.
jdege wrote:You just need to shoot bigger guns.
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