Stumpkiller said:
Lets try this exercise. You make a measure the size of a pea and call it a "droople". You then play around and find that your rifle shoots best with eight drooples of FFFg powder.
You can be a happy man and shoot well and accurately and, unless someone wants to duplicate your load (or you lose your measure and want to repeat your results), it doesn't matter a henway how much a droople is compared to grains, or what volume a droople represents. When you measure out eight drooples you do it by volume because the measure you fill holds one droople. Till you get tired of that and make an eight-droople measure so you fill it just once.
PS - when you buy blackpowder the can will not be full because they sell it by weight and some settling may occur. :haha:
Snow, after reading all the replies, I think Stumpkiller has given you the best answer. There really is NO exact standard when weighing/measuring black powder. It's important to remember that this is an old standard, akin to weighing grain in STONES, and horses in HANDS. Back in the day, the weight and yield of black powder varied greatly from maker-to-maker, batch-to-batch, place-to-place, etc. It isn't much better today, since black powder isn't used for anything commercially, or in the military, where exact standards are needed. When you start comparing real black to substitute powders, you just need to completely ignore that old standard.
The only exception to this inaccuracy of the standard I know of may be used in measuring modern shotgun shells. If you notice, they are measured in "drams equivelent", which is based on the old black powder standard. But I do wonder if that is really based on some measureable standard, or if it's just "pretty close".
Yes, those store bought measures are pretty inaccurate, but I never worry about it. I think it's important to find a certain VOLUME of your favorite powder, where accuracy is best, and use that as your personal standard. If you have a powder scale, you can measure that certain volume to duplicate a powder measure, or just to find out how much it really weighs, but don't expect its weight to have more relevance beyond that. For example, if you use 80 grains of fffg, and want to try ffg, the powder measure you use will throw a different weight with the ffg, the yield (strength) will be different, and your accuracy may vary.
In a nutshell, use the weight of powder as a ballpark figure when working up a load, or when comparing loads between different guns and shooters. But beyond that, simply find the best VOLUME for your particular gun, weigh it if you like, and just use that same volume in a consistant manner. I hope this helps. Bill