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Tennessee Gun Owners Forums
Muzzleloader
Weighing Blackhorn 209 Charge
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<blockquote data-quote="GMB54" data-source="post: 5226465" data-attributes="member: 15365"><p>The big thing with weight is, assuming you have a good scale....70gr or whatever will always be 70gr by weight. You remove the chance of user error unless you get a volume measure like a Redding or Harrels. Those types of volume measures can be super consistent with almost no practice. Your typical black powder field measure takes a little more effort on the part of the shooter to get consistent.</p><p></p><p>I calibrate my Chargemaster, tell it how much weight i want and press a button. It will keep filling the pan as long as i want so its very very easy. Plus powder waste is basically nothing. Each load gets dumped in a tube. All the tubes go in a ammo can or range box. Sure makes range days or recreational shooting easy and when hunting its one less thing i need to carry with me.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="GMB54, post: 5226465, member: 15365"] The big thing with weight is, assuming you have a good scale....70gr or whatever will always be 70gr by weight. You remove the chance of user error unless you get a volume measure like a Redding or Harrels. Those types of volume measures can be super consistent with almost no practice. Your typical black powder field measure takes a little more effort on the part of the shooter to get consistent. I calibrate my Chargemaster, tell it how much weight i want and press a button. It will keep filling the pan as long as i want so its very very easy. Plus powder waste is basically nothing. Each load gets dumped in a tube. All the tubes go in a ammo can or range box. Sure makes range days or recreational shooting easy and when hunting its one less thing i need to carry with me. [/QUOTE]
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Tennessee Gun Owners Forums
Muzzleloader
Weighing Blackhorn 209 Charge
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