I decided that I hate all of the balances sold for reloading. I still use and love my old balance beam style reloading scale, but all of the electronic ones suck. I play a Chemist at work during the day, and have had a lot of exposure to some very nice electronic balances over the years. I use a Metler-Toledo analytical balance (accurate to 0.00005g or 0.0008 grains) for weighing bullets. It cost the company about $3k and was worth every penny. The boss chuckles when he sees me sorting bullets.
Here’s the thing about sensitive electronic balances.
1) They don’t like to move. Ever.
2) Air currents are bad for accuracy and precision
3) They don’t like vibrations
4) They don’t like to be turned off
5) The need to sit level
6) They need periodic recalibration
7) You get what you pay for
In the lab, all of the analytical balances sit on big marble or granite tables. The tables are heavy, so they dampen vibrations. The tables have an enclosure around the balance to help with air currents, and they sit in a part of the room where the HVAC doesn’t blow directly on them. They get daily calibration checks and quarterly factory service calls. The service calls are a bit excessive for home use, but the daily checks are not.
Very few reloaders are willing to spend the $500 and up for a decent balance. They expect that $100 one to perform, or worse, they expect the $24.95 one to perform. They also don’t want to dedicate a table with a cheap granite surface plate and an enclosure to solve most of the common issues. Worst of all, they get cheap with electricity and turn off the electronics after using it.
At home I used to have a 30 year old surplus Metler-Toledo that measures to 0.001g (0.015 grains). I had to do math to convert to grains for reloading. Unfortunately it finally gave up the ghost while moving to Missouri. It will get replaced with another surplus bench top balance when I find one.
Bottom line on advice. A scientific balance is better than a reloading balance. You get what you pay for, so get ready to pay. You can solve a lot of the common “problems” by putting the balance in the right place, and treating it right. The drawback is that you aren’t likely to find the same quality if it reads in grains or ounces.