I'm pretty late to the party here but, you sir are a gentleman and a scholar. I got a vintage RCBS 505 scale and I couldn't get it to zero. This video got me dead on. Thanks so much!
I am new to reloading and found JUIJITSU2000's videos about a month ago. I can't believe how great they are. Like someone said on his 9mm vid, it's like sitting in a class, I have learned so much. Thank you sir for making all of these and sharing with us!
Just what I was looking for. Thank you! UPDATE: Using these instructions my new scale pan is now balanced perfectly. It was not when I received it. Thanks again!
Thanks for a great presentation. I was having difficulties zeroing my 5-0-5, in fact never did get it to zero. Watched your demonstration on the 5-0-2 and applied it. WALA, it worked in reverse. Thanks
Thank you for this video! I thought my scale was trashed after years sitting in a box. Almost bought a new scale until i saw your trick for calibration...my scale is back in operation and ready for work!
I had that same trickle and couldn’t get it to work for a darn. I think I got it back in 1975. Well I kept the scale that I bought and I don’t know what happened to that trickle. But I did get a new one a couple of years ago. Also I did calibrate my scale and it works like new. Thank for your videos. They are very informative. You can teach a old dog new tricks.
The white plastic foot is there to wind up or down to get the initial zero, or at least something very near. You may need to add a tiny amount of flattened shot if the gap between the top of the white foot and the bottom of the scale body is much over or under 10mm. No offence but you over complicated a simple task. Look up the user name thetargetmaster on here. You'll learn alot. Thanks for taking the time to make the video though.
Wow, thank you so much for this video. I have the rcbs 502 and I was wondering why I was raising the scale so high, so as to get it to zero. It was actually coming off the screw. I had to raise front by adding stuff to reach zero. But now I found the answer with your video. In my case, I had to remove 1 tiny and 1 small bearing and she zeroe'd out. Thanks.
I have a question,, when measuring a pistol load, is the left side ruler of scale also used with right side in the computation? Or is it just the right side? For example, if I want a load of 4.7 or 5.1,, is the weight on left side moved to the base number of 4 or 5, and right side to the point number? This is for a 9mm round.
As I've told you in a few other comments on your 30-30 & 45acp videos, you're dishin' out all the right info I need, as I am new to reloading! My father-in-law gave me his old RCBS kit with this scale this past Summer and I'd been searching for a video like this since then and found nothing close to being this precise or even close to what I need! Thanks again! This is exactly what I need!! Thank you!
I,was trying to set kitchen scales ,learned more than I,needed but I,liked this .Wish I,was smart enough to use this info.Thank,s you started my brain ,Thank,s
Thanks for all of your videos and great info. I recently got all of my reloading equipment that I needed.. and put together 50 rounds of 50 A.E. for my desert eagle. It was lots of fun, and very interesting. I got the nerve to do it after watching all of your videos.. thanks for the info.
Is there not enough travel in the adjustment wheel to calibrate the scale without taking apart the scale AND a shotgun shell? Surely RCBS didn't design a scale with such a fundamental flaw?
Thank you for that demonstration; I had no idea that the scale was easy to calibrate. Keep up the good work; I am starting into reloading and all your videos are very informative.
Thanks for the great video. I am considering buying an RCBS 505. If I buy one used, now I know how to zero the scale in case a used one needs calibration.
Thank you for the support and the kind words. I didn't know that you could weigh a penny or a nickel! Thank you for the tip!! Thats a good one to know. I agree about the solder. Have a great day! It's beautiful outside here... :)
Thank you! I was using a cutting technique that I was taught in a survival class when I was in the military. We used this technique a lot to cut small twigs. I made a "wood tricks" video where I explain and demonstrate it. I'll be sharing that video soon. I'll admit, it looks unsafe, but in all honesty, it's a great technique. Thank you for the concern as well as the support to my channel. Have a great evening! :)
I've always stayed stocked up and I'm glad that I did because of the shortage that we're all having now... I usually order my stuff through Midway. Have a great day! :)
Great stuff!! Nice to see all the little details. I'll be getting my first scale and have decided on a beam-style; the Dillon. I'm not sure if it can be calibrated in this way, but will know more soon. Cheers from Beautiful BC!
A few days ago I got a new pan holder and wire arm for my 502. I opened up the pan holder and added rice till it balanced. Then I weighed a bullet I have there. It came up a little short but that may be the variance in the bullet weights.
Hey Skeet, the Frankfurt Arsenal is off a bit. The same thing happens to mine. Exact same equipment. Not enough to make a big difference but the beam scale is exact without any tolerances like the FA. +/- .1
The question remains; how did the RCBS scale go out of calibration. Did a BB fall out of the pan holder? Or did the scale build up static charge and throw off the magnets that slow and hold the bar? If it is static and you did not address it, then it will go off again real soon.
From the RCBS scale instruction sheet. "HOW TO ZERO BALANCE THE SCALE Place both the large poise and the micrometer poise at zero. If the scale has been placed on a reasonably level surface, the beam pointer will come to rest fairly close to the zero graduation on the dial plate. Raise or lower the left end of the base by means of the leveling foot to line them up. The scale should be zero balanced before use and checked periodically during use for maximum accuracy and protection against error."
He has the adjusting foot screwed all the way in. It should be in the middle or near middle of its range. Don't worry about zero until you have first leveled the beam. Then zero the base to the beam.
Great video, the only problem is the knife handling skills when cutting the shell open, cutting towards the body, fingers across shell, etc...A very good chance of slicing yourself up with that method. Lay the shell on the table, rotate as you slice through it, fingers clear.
jujitsu 2000 I am new to reloading and am trying to pick my tools carfully. I'm not sure about digital vs beam scales. I tend to lean towards old fashioned ways. what is your opinion on this and do you have a preference regarding brand od scales. the RCBS seems solidly constructed. just want to get well made reliable equipment. thanks for the video and I look forward to your response.
tjmooremusic Hey guy. I've had so much trouble with digital scales 😯 it's pathetic. I packed up my 30 year old RCBS 505, well guess what it's back in service. The digital garbage made in China is NOT accurate at all some wouldn't even hold an adjustment. So I am sticking to what works for me my ole 505. 😁
tjmooremusic I have a Win 70 varmint 26" heavy bbl in 243 also have a 220 Swift same model both guns are setup the same. I purchased them a year apart 1996 and 1997 both have Leopold 4.5-14X40 scopes with 4" sun shades. These guns are tack drivers. I've never purchased a box of factory shells I load my own each powder charge is that's dropped is within a 10th of a grain. Reloading has been a life long hobby for me. I am 64 now and still love working up pet loads. What I load is alot more accurate than factory ammo. My 243 can get a quarter size group at 600 yards. I know your new to reloading but if you put 120% into what your doing the results will be outstanding. Stick with it son it will only get better over time. Ohh and dont ask me how many whistle pigs I've shot in the last 50 years. 😁 Have fun.
had a flashback back to the the first grade while watching this - unbelievably, excruciatingly 'detailed' - --- what? you think we're all fkn toddlers with guns or sump-ting. GEEZUZ
Digital scales hcan have a + or - .1gr reading. Coupled to the fact that i have that digital scale that he is using and if its not warmed up sufficently it can have bigger swings than that. So i can see the diference between the two that he was showing. Also a tenth on a beam scale looks like a lot.
Can you zero the lee red scale the same way? It looks like the same kind of scale i havent used mine in years a good friend gave me a digital scale that he got as a gift from his wife it was the same one he had already but i would like to go old school scales again
first of all I like your videos very helpful I have a 505 scale it shows that the zero is high all the way up. there was little shaves & a piece of lead at the pa I took the lead out check some powder with a 1500 gr digital the 505 scale it was at zero is this the correct way to do it they showed the same
I too, just bought a used RCBS 10-10, and I found out why the guy sold it cheap. It would not zero... at all. I followed these steps, but included leveling the beam with a lazer level (that way I didn't have to touch it), then took out the Daisy BB's that were inside and calibrated the pan using #11 shot from a .44 magnum shotshell. It works perfectly now and A/B's against a digital scale just fine.
I'm no expert, but. Wouldn't it be better to screw the adjusting foot to the middle of it's range, level the beam (eye-ball it to something level) then zero the base to the beam. This way your level adjustment foot can be screwed in either direction.
Yes, that's exactly right. What you're after by adding or subtracting weight to the powder pan holder is getting the beam level with the two poise weights at zero. The adjustment foot on the scale body is there to adjust for minor deviations from level in the surface the scale sits on. I think the terms 'zeroing' and `calibrating' a scale in some of these videos get confused, and they are two different things.
I took the small weight out of the weight pa. screw out the screw at the pa you will see some shaves & a piece of small lead remove lead check your zero check with other scale make sure you check
Good topic, thoroughly explained. thanks. If you do not have a second scale, you can use US "pennys and nickels", they are 2.500grams and 5.000grams respectively. use the Google search box, enter: convert 2.500 grams to grains and it will 'do the math' for you. You can use the same coins to check your calipers, see: USmint.gov/about_the_mint/?action=coin_specifications I would be tempted to use a short length of Solder, cut to length/balance-weight and not have the "shot" rattling.
Your beam should be level as well. It's pretty obvious in this video that it is not. You are also not allowing for enough adjustment like another viewer said. A lot of guys thinking you are ok, but they are being mislead with this information. It's not going to be as precise as it should be... Hang in there, you'll get one of these days...
Correct !! The shot is there to LEVEL THE BEAM horizontally (this is completely different from zeroing the BASE). His beam is clearly leaning to the left in the end. Meaning the shot in the pan holder is too light. He would need to add a bit more shot, until the beam is DEAD-ON horizontal. Only then the base should be zero'ed.
You don't have hardly any adjustment. I had various sizes ans shapes in my 505 which when the pan got turned sideways the shot would hang up and wouldn't balance. I used .20 & .25 6mm airsoft bb's put a complete circle around pan and put adj. about in center and adjusted between-the two sizes to get the beam even. There is a grove in the pan so they can't moce around to much worked great.
I really don’t understand this. Your scale comes from the factory with the appropriate weight already. Using a scale to check against is questionable. Using check weights is a better option than a random bullet or pieces of shot. To be honest you calibrated nothing. The weights on the beam and the scales numbers determine the accuracy of the scale.
I'm pretty late to the party here but, you sir are a gentleman and a scholar. I got a vintage RCBS 505 scale and I couldn't get it to zero. This video got me dead on. Thanks so much!
I am new to reloading and found JUIJITSU2000's videos about a month ago. I can't believe how great they are. Like someone said on his 9mm vid, it's like sitting in a class, I have learned so much. Thank you sir for making all of these and sharing with us!
Thank you for the very kind words and support. Please feel free to share or tell a friend. I could use the traction. Blessings from Arizona! 🙏
Just what I was looking for. Thank you!
UPDATE: Using these instructions my new scale pan is now balanced perfectly. It was not when I received it. Thanks again!
Just the information I was looking for!
Thanks for a great presentation. I was having difficulties zeroing my 5-0-5, in fact never did get it to zero. Watched your demonstration on the 5-0-2 and applied it. WALA, it worked in reverse. Thanks
Thank you for this video! I thought my scale was trashed after years sitting in a box. Almost bought a new scale until i saw your trick for calibration...my scale is back in operation and ready for work!
I had that same trickle and couldn’t get it to work for a darn. I think I got it back in 1975.
Well I kept the scale that I bought and I don’t know what happened to that trickle. But I did get a new one a couple of years ago. Also I did calibrate my scale and it works like new. Thank for your videos. They are very informative. You can teach a old dog new tricks.
Great Job. Been using this EXACT SAME technique for over 50 years. Works perfectly every time. Well done. Ignore the "Naysayers"
The white plastic foot is there to wind up or down to get the initial zero, or at least something very near. You may need to add a tiny amount of flattened shot if the gap between the top of the white foot and the bottom of the scale body is much over or under 10mm. No offence but you over complicated a simple task. Look up the user name thetargetmaster on here. You'll learn alot. Thanks for taking the time to make the video though.
Wow, thank you so much for this video. I have the rcbs 502 and I was wondering why I was raising the scale so high, so as to get it to zero. It was actually coming off the screw. I had to raise front by adding stuff to reach zero. But now I found the answer with your video. In my case, I had to remove 1 tiny and 1 small bearing and she zeroe'd out. Thanks.
You're welcome! Thank you as well!
I have a question,, when measuring a pistol load, is the left side ruler of scale also used with right side in the computation? Or is it just the right side? For example, if I want a load of 4.7 or 5.1,, is the weight on left side moved to the base number of 4 or 5, and right side to the point number? This is for a 9mm round.
As I've told you in a few other comments on your 30-30 & 45acp videos, you're dishin' out all the right info I need, as I am new to reloading! My father-in-law gave me his old RCBS kit with this scale this past Summer and I'd been searching for a video like this since then and found nothing close to being this precise or even close to what I need! Thanks again! This is exactly what I need!! Thank you!
I,was trying to set kitchen scales ,learned more than I,needed but I,liked this .Wish I,was smart enough to use this info.Thank,s you started my brain ,Thank,s
Thank you for taking the time to leave the kind words and also for the support you give my channel. Have a good evening! :)
2 things, first thank you for your service Sir. And second, awesome video. you could not have made it any easier. Thank You.
+garry chaney Wow! I'm humbled... Excellent comment! Thank you as well. Have an amazing day!
Thanks for sharing! Greetings from Brazil!
Thanks for all of your videos and great info. I recently got all of my reloading equipment that I needed.. and put together 50 rounds of 50 A.E. for my desert eagle. It was lots of fun, and very interesting. I got the nerve to do it after watching all of your videos.. thanks for the info.
Is there not enough travel in the adjustment wheel to calibrate the scale without taking apart the scale AND a shotgun shell? Surely RCBS didn't design a scale with such a fundamental flaw?
great video, I use the 5.0.5, with the grains/grams converter I load the 12 gauge
Thank you for that demonstration; I had no idea that the scale was easy to calibrate.
Keep up the good work; I am starting into reloading and all your videos are very informative.
You could also use string solder instead of the #8 shot for the final measurement.
Nice job . Lots of good ideas.
Thanks again Juijitsu, excellent , you make it soooo easy to follow and understand
Enufzed
thankyou sir from australia ,your videos are well worth watching .
+Perth “Fishing” Wa Thank you from Arizona for the very kind words and support you give my channel. Have a beautiful day!
Thank you Jiujitsu2000! This just simplified a lot of the initial set up I have to do with my 502 scale. Very helpful
+Ken Sullivan Thank you!
I used solder wire, thank you for your work I'm subscribeing.
Thanks for the great video. I am considering buying an RCBS 505. If I buy one used, now I know how to zero the scale in case a used one needs calibration.
Thank you for the kind words and support you give my channel! Have a beautiful day!!
Awesome explanation. I wonder if because you didn’t zero it with your shot that all three readings read high on the 502 versus your digital scale?
Thank you for the support and the kind words. I didn't know that you could weigh a penny or a nickel! Thank you for the tip!! Thats a good one to know. I agree about the solder. Have a great day! It's beautiful outside here... :)
Good Video! Thank you for taking the time to make and post it!
Awesome! Thanks for the kind words and support to my channel! I'll keep the good info coming. Have a great day! :)
Thank you! I was using a cutting technique that I was taught in a survival class when I was in the military. We used this technique a lot to cut small twigs. I made a "wood tricks" video where I explain and demonstrate it. I'll be sharing that video soon. I'll admit, it looks unsafe, but in all honesty, it's a great technique. Thank you for the concern as well as the support to my channel. Have a great evening! :)
And now which scale are you going to trust, Beam or Digital?
Awesome video as I have an RCBS 5-0-5, I will definitely remember this and subscribe and watch all your videos. Great job.
Thank you so much for the kind words and support that you give my channel
I've always stayed stocked up and I'm glad that I did because of the shortage that we're all having now... I usually order my stuff through Midway. Have a great day! :)
Great stuff!! Nice to see all the little details.
I'll be getting my first scale and have decided on a beam-style; the Dillon. I'm not sure if it can be calibrated in this way, but will know more soon. Cheers from Beautiful BC!
A few days ago I got a new pan holder and wire arm for my 502. I opened up the pan holder and added rice till it balanced. Then I weighed a bullet I have there. It came up a little short but that may be the variance in the bullet weights.
Thank you for your videos. Please keep them coming!
You made it very easy.
Thank you.
Thank you for the support. Will do! Have a great day! :)
Thank you very much for this video,it helped me 100%.
Hey Skeet, the Frankfurt Arsenal is off a bit. The same thing happens to mine. Exact same equipment. Not enough to make a big difference but the beam scale is exact without any tolerances like the FA. +/- .1
Thank you for your service...
Thanks for the video!
You're welcome!
The question remains; how did the RCBS scale go out of calibration. Did a BB fall out of the pan holder? Or did the scale build up static charge and throw off the magnets that slow and hold the bar? If it is static and you did not address it, then it will go off again real soon.
Damn clever. Thanks!
top shelf informative how to vid. Well done.
Thank you!
Thank you for the kind words. I appreciate the support to my channel. I'll keep the good content coming. Have a good day! :)
From the RCBS scale instruction sheet. "HOW TO ZERO BALANCE THE SCALE
Place both the large poise and the micrometer poise at zero. If
the scale has been placed on a reasonably level surface, the
beam pointer will come to rest fairly close to the zero graduation
on the dial plate. Raise or lower the left end of the base by means
of the leveling foot to line them up.
The scale should be zero balanced before use and checked
periodically during use for maximum accuracy and protection
against error."
He has the adjusting foot screwed all the way in. It should be in the middle or near middle of its range. Don't worry about zero until you have first leveled the beam. Then zero the base to the beam.
Good job Sailor!
Do you have a video on re-calibrating the 502 to a weight check after zeroing?
Thanks for watching! Have a good day. :)
this does not relate to this video but i have a question? where do u order your primers, and rounds its self ?
Hi, how accurate is that digital scale?
Do you have to use this technique on a new scale?
+Dino Giolitti not on a new one
Great video, the only problem is the knife handling skills when cutting the shell open, cutting towards the body, fingers across shell, etc...A very good chance of slicing yourself up with that method. Lay the shell on the table, rotate as you slice through it, fingers clear.
You are a champion cheers mate
Was there something wrong the weight of pan
jujitsu 2000
I am new to reloading and am trying to pick my tools carfully.
I'm not sure about digital vs beam scales.
I tend to lean towards old fashioned ways.
what is your opinion on this and do you have a preference regarding brand od scales.
the RCBS seems solidly constructed. just want to get well made reliable equipment.
thanks for the video and I look forward to your response.
I like both options, but use digital scale more. Thank you for stopping by!
tjmooremusic
Hey guy.
I've had so much trouble with digital scales 😯 it's pathetic. I packed up my 30 year old RCBS 505, well guess what it's back in service. The digital garbage made in China is NOT accurate at all some wouldn't even hold an adjustment. So I am sticking to what works for me my ole 505. 😁
Steve H
thanks for sharing that. I really like the idea of a old fashioned scale. just gotta keep it good n level...
tjmooremusic
I have a Win 70 varmint 26" heavy bbl in 243 also have a 220 Swift same model both guns are setup the same. I purchased them a year apart 1996 and 1997 both have Leopold 4.5-14X40 scopes with 4" sun shades. These guns are tack drivers. I've never purchased a box of factory shells I load my own each powder charge is that's dropped is within a 10th of a grain. Reloading has been a life long hobby for me. I am 64 now and still love working up pet loads. What I load is alot more accurate than factory ammo. My 243 can get a quarter size group at 600 yards. I know your new to reloading but if you put 120% into what your doing the results will be outstanding. Stick with it son it will only get better over time. Ohh and dont ask me how many whistle pigs I've shot in the last 50 years. 😁 Have fun.
Hi Pal. Nice tutorial and tips :D Thanks!
Good effort. 21 minute video for a 2 minute process. painfully long.
+kylie batcho thanks
had a flashback back to the the first grade while watching this - unbelievably, excruciatingly 'detailed' - --- what? you think we're all fkn toddlers with guns or sump-ting. GEEZUZ
@@lonewolfmtnz could have just cut the end off the shell and poured the pellets out, but noooooooo!
Awesome, thank you
Very good video, thanks for information
thanks for your videos!
How does something like 24.88 gr get read or measured please?
You'd need to step up to the RCBS 505 scale. It reads down to a half tenth where the 502 scale is not as precise.
Digital scales hcan have a + or - .1gr reading. Coupled to the fact that i have that digital scale that he is using and if its not warmed up sufficently it can have bigger swings than that. So i can see the diference between the two that he was showing. Also a tenth on a beam scale looks like a lot.
Thank you GOD BLESS
Thanks !!
Thank you soooooo much gust got my first scale and thought I had one that was defective 😂
Great video,anyone ever told you that you sound like Kevin Costner
Can you zero the lee red scale the same way? It looks like the same kind of scale i havent used mine in years a good friend gave me a digital scale that he got as a gift from his wife it was the same one he had already but i would like to go old school scales again
I believe so.
Another great vid! thank you for information! i want to buy a 502! :-)
They're nice scales! Thank you. :-)
first of all I like your videos very helpful I have a 505 scale it shows that the zero is high all the way up. there was little shaves & a piece of lead at the pa I took the lead out check some powder with a 1500 gr digital the 505 scale it was at zero is this the correct way to do it they showed the same
Thank you!
am i seeing things or is the beam set to 175 not 165 !
I don't get it? These scales come with a perfectly weighted pan holder. Did you remove the shot that was in there and simply added some new? Why??
I bought this scale used. thank you for stopping by
I too, just bought a used RCBS 10-10, and I found out why the guy sold it cheap. It would not zero... at all. I followed these steps, but included leveling the beam with a lazer level (that way I didn't have to touch it), then took out the Daisy BB's that were inside and calibrated the pan using #11 shot from a .44 magnum shotshell. It works perfectly now and A/B's against a digital scale just fine.
I'm no expert, but. Wouldn't it be better to screw the adjusting foot to the middle of it's range, level the beam (eye-ball it to something level) then zero the base to the beam. This way your level adjustment foot can be screwed in either direction.
Yes, that's exactly right. What you're after by adding or subtracting weight to the powder pan holder is getting the beam level with the two poise weights at zero. The adjustment foot on the scale body is there to adjust for minor deviations from level in the surface the scale sits on. I think the terms 'zeroing' and `calibrating' a scale in some of these videos get confused, and they are two different things.
You seem to be ok with it not being dead on when check those bullets. Why is that. My 10 10 does the same thing. Thanks
Because I always compare it to at least one more scale, sometimes two.
Geeeesh
Get on with it.
You are killing me
Jesus man it’s nowhere near
GOOD JOB. THANKS.
Thanks
Mine is 505 and it is too heavy when all three poise are on zero whats wrong???
I took the small weight out of the weight pa. screw out the screw at the pa you will see some shaves & a piece of small lead remove lead check your zero check with other scale make sure you check
Did you try leveling it out, and see if that works
Good topic, thoroughly explained. thanks. If you do not have a second scale, you can use US "pennys and nickels", they are 2.500grams and 5.000grams respectively.
use the Google search box, enter: convert 2.500 grams to grains
and it will 'do the math' for you. You can use the same coins to check your calipers,
see: USmint.gov/about_the_mint/?action=coin_specifications
I would be tempted to use a short length of Solder, cut to length/balance-weight
and not have the "shot" rattling.
What is the point of this? Adjust the wheel to suit rather than pratting around with extra weights, or build a level bench.
Thenks great info
Hopefully this will fix my ohaus lyman m5
THANK YOU
Why not just cut a piece of solder then melt it to the pan never a difference .
Your beam should be level as well. It's pretty obvious in this video that it is not. You are also not allowing for enough adjustment like another viewer said. A lot of guys thinking you are ok, but they are being mislead with this information. It's not going to be as precise as it should be... Hang in there, you'll get one of these days...
Correct !! The shot is there to LEVEL THE BEAM horizontally (this is completely different from zeroing the BASE). His beam is clearly leaning to the left in the end. Meaning the shot in the pan holder is too light. He would need to add a bit more shot, until the beam is DEAD-ON horizontal. Only then the base should be zero'ed.
You don’t need to ‘go ahead’ and do something. Just do something.
So you zeroed the scale and not calibrated it. Got it. Now off to search how to calibrate a beam scale.
You don't have hardly any adjustment. I had various sizes ans shapes in my 505 which when the pan got turned sideways the shot would hang up and wouldn't balance. I used .20 & .25 6mm airsoft bb's put a complete circle around pan and put adj. about in center and adjusted between-the two sizes to get the beam even. There is a grove in the pan so they can't moce around to much worked great.
thank you for the comment and support you give my channel! have a beautiful day!!
+jiujitsu2000 Always enjoy your videos, thanks.
+George Reichle thank you
a piar of twezzers would worker better
I really don’t understand this. Your scale comes from the factory with the appropriate weight already. Using a scale to check against is questionable. Using check weights is a better option than a random bullet or pieces of shot. To be honest you calibrated nothing. The weights on the beam and the scales numbers determine the accuracy of the scale.
I didn't have to do anything like you did, just turn the wheel, done, hmm.
this does not relate to this video but i have a question? where do u order your primers, and rounds its self ?