Swampman said:Your reasoning doesn't hold water. There's no point in perpetuating the corny myths that abound in this hobby. Campfire quaterbacks are the ones that feed this poop to newbies and they pass it along to others as fact. 60 grains of anything is still 60 grains.
Mike Roberts said:Swampman said:Your reasoning doesn't hold water. There's no point in perpetuating the corny myths that abound in this hobby. Campfire quaterbacks are the ones that feed this poop to newbies and they pass it along to others as fact. 60 grains of anything is still 60 grains.
Sir: you are apparently missing the point of this discussion. Hopefully the newbies will get it. Although we talk of grains (weight) we really are throwing volume. The measures are calibrated (more or less) so that the 70 (say) grain mark VOLUME OF FFG on the tube throws about 70 gr WEIGHT OF FFG. This does equate to fg or fffg weights because of the aggregate packing laws mentioned above. Nor would it throw the same weight of wheaties or salt--because in those cases both the size-shape-orientation-packing parameters AND such compositional things as density vary from the original calibration--but the volume would be the same in the tube. This is basic science, not campfire myth.
Richard, I wasn't putting any emphasis on any marks at all...I was simply using 100grns as an example for sake of the discussion...could have used 40, or 75, etc.Richard/Ga. said:Y'all are placing too much importance on the the numbers on the sliding stem in adjustable powder measures. As long as you use the same measure each time and set it to the mark that you found provides the amount of powder that works best for the particular rifle your are shooting, it really doesn't matter whether the amount marked on the stem accurately reflects the amount of powder in the measure. The numbers on the stem are only reference marks. I concede they are somewhat standardized according to grains by volume.
Now suppose I filed off all the marks on the sliding stem of a brand new measure, and then filed a little mark every 1/16th. of an inch and a big mark at every 1/4", 1/2", 3/4" and inch mark from one end to the other. Then I used that measure and found the best load for "Old Squirrel Killer". Then in order to record how much powder she likes I counted the marks on the stem sticking out of the end of the measure and determined I will need to set the measure at seven big marks and three little ones each time for this particular rifle.
My measure with its large and small marks is just as accurate and the volume of powder measured is just as repeatable as a factory measure that is marked 40, 50, 60, 70, etc under the big marks and has four little marks between the big ones.
Richard/Ga.
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