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RCBS Chargemaster 1500 Review By Jim Brown
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<blockquote data-quote="yobuck" data-source="post: 590456" data-attributes="member: 12443"><p>i recently had a large 338 rifle built by a well known pa gunsmith.</p><p>i questioned him about the chargemaster on his loading bench.</p><p>there were several other scales and dispensers also. his opinion is that he dosent trust them with large charges of coarse powder like h50bmg.</p><p>he has found them to be off by several grains when checked on another scale.</p><p> </p><p>i also had a long conversation with a tech at sinclairs. his recommendation was the 1500. he then went on to say warm up time is crucial.</p><p>several hours at least before using. also no moving air or flouresant lighting.</p><p>he then said he personaly checks about every 10th load on a balance scale.</p><p>that was enough to convince me to stick with my old redding balance scale</p><p>and conventional powder measure.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="yobuck, post: 590456, member: 12443"] i recently had a large 338 rifle built by a well known pa gunsmith. i questioned him about the chargemaster on his loading bench. there were several other scales and dispensers also. his opinion is that he dosent trust them with large charges of coarse powder like h50bmg. he has found them to be off by several grains when checked on another scale. i also had a long conversation with a tech at sinclairs. his recommendation was the 1500. he then went on to say warm up time is crucial. several hours at least before using. also no moving air or flouresant lighting. he then said he personaly checks about every 10th load on a balance scale. that was enough to convince me to stick with my old redding balance scale and conventional powder measure. [/QUOTE]
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RCBS Chargemaster 1500 Review By Jim Brown
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