Rat Trapper said:
I weight my charges of triple seven. This is the loads I use for serious shooting and hunting. With Goex or plinking with triple seven I load by volume. There is no way weighting charges can hurt anything other than take up some time.
I agree with your statement as far as it goes just as long as the person doing the weighing knows what he's working with.
If he is working with black powder then there is no problem but, if he doesn't know that the synthetic powders are lighter he could get himself in trouble.
Say he reads where someone who loads 120 grains of FFg into his gun really likes the results.
Then he gets out his 777 and weighs out 120 grains of it on his powder scale.
What he doesn't realize is that 777 weighs only 70 percent of the weight of real black powder*.
This makes his 120 grain actual weight load the equivalent of 156 grains of volumetrically measured black powder. (120 X 1.3 = 156)
To make matters worse, 777 powder is 15 percent more powerful than an equal volume of black powder*.
That makes his 156 grain equivalent load of 777 equal to 179 grains of real black powder. (156 X 1.15 = 179)
Faced with facts like these, a person ought to be able to see that measuring any black powder substitute on a powder scale can rapidly get them into some potentially serious situations.
Take ole' zonies advice, "Use a volumetric powder measure and be safe. Use your powder scale for those new fangled powders where the weight of a piece of fly scat makes a difference and most important of all, have fun."
* Based on Hodgdon Powder Co. data.