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View Full Version : Economical electric scale.



Limited GM
03-04-2014, 21:38
In every group there's some guy who's bought good stuff and then found a cheap off brand that works just as well.

anyone found an accurate affordable elec scale?

XC700116
03-04-2014, 21:43
http://www.oldwillknottscales.com/my-weigh-gempro-250.html?gclid=CIDXgu28-rwCFQ5gMgodwFkAsA

Very accurate and repeatable without the flaky bs of a lot of digi scales

BuffCyclist
03-04-2014, 21:48
http://www.oldwillknottscales.com/my-weigh-gempro-250.html?gclid=CIDXgu28-rwCFQ5gMgodwFkAsA

Very accurate and repeatable without the flaky bs of a lot of digi scales

I second this. I love my MyWeigh GemPro 250, very accurate and repeatable. Not sure if I'd call $140 affordable but compared to $400 or higher, sure. I only recently discovered mine to be temperature sensitive. If it is cold (temperature, not electronics just turned on), the reading will drift even if I recalibrate it. Now I keep it inside (instead of my garage) and haven't had any other problems.

Their lifetime warranty is what sold it for me.

I also heard great things of the Brian Enos scales for ~$75, but no direct experience with them.

Irving
03-04-2014, 21:56
I second this. I love my MyWeigh GemPro 250, very accurate and repeatable. Not sure if I'd call $140 affordable but compared to $400 or higher, sure. I only recently discovered mine to be temperature sensitive. If it is cold (temperature, not electronics just turned on), the reading will drift even if I recalibrate it. Now I keep it inside (instead of my garage) and haven't had any other problems.

Their lifetime warranty is what sold it for me.

I also heard great things of the Brian Enos scales for ~$75, but no direct experience with them.

How cold is "cold?" My garage is heated and usually only gets as cold as 50 degrees.

Brian
03-05-2014, 00:32
I have no actual experience, so take anything I say with a grain of salt. However, I did a lot of reading/research and the gempro 250 does seem to be what a lot of people recommend for a "cheap" elec. scale. It's also only approx $120 on amazon, so there's another $20 you could save over the link above. Mine arrived a couple days ago.

It's also the only current scale Enos has on his website for sale, though he has it marked up a bit more.

BuffCyclist
03-05-2014, 07:29
How cold is "cold?" My garage is heated and usually only gets as cold as 50 degrees.

It wasn't colder than 50. The interesting thing was I used it out there all winter without problems and suddenly it started doing this. A 168gr bullet, after calibration with the included 20g weight, weighed 272gr. Burris on their website, it says to keep the scale in a room between 65-85F, or it will drift, just like mine was doing. After warming up for a few hours, it was holding steady again.

KS63
03-05-2014, 08:24
I just got my Gempro 250 in the other day. I let it warm up for a few hours before I use it. It's the most repeatable and accurate scale I've used. One of the best pieces of equipment I've bought. And it reads to .02 grains.

BuffCyclist
03-05-2014, 08:34
Let me reiterate/clarify, my issue was with the temperature of the room the scale was in, so the physical temperature of the scale was below their recommended operating temperature (65*F - 85*F). This has nothing to do with turning on the scale and letting the electronics "warm" up to their steady state temperature. I have honestly never seen a difference in a reading between immediately after turning the scale on and turning it on then waiting hours or even days.

Great-Kazoo
03-05-2014, 08:46
Let me reiterate/clarify, my issue was with the temperature of the room the scale was in, so the physical temperature of the scale was below their recommended operating temperature (65*F - 85*F). This has nothing to do with turning on the scale and letting the electronics "warm" up to their steady state temperature. I have honestly never seen a difference in a reading between immediately after turning the scale on and turning it on then waiting hours or even days.

I turn my rcbs rangemaster 750 on prior to any loading. http://media.midwayusa.com/productimages/120x90/primary/814/814722.jpgI run it off 110v vs. the battery. The shop temp varies until i get some heat (28K btu propane ) going. The only time i see variations in weight is when a fan is on, or there is lots of movement, in the area.

The 750 runs approx $100, depending where you buy.

Hoser
03-05-2014, 09:03
Brian Enos sells a pretty solid scale. Better than the Dillon scale.

Brian
03-05-2014, 13:40
Brian Enos sells a pretty solid scale. Better than the Dillon scale.

I know he's changed up his scale a couple times, but unless I'm missing something, the only one listed on his site right now is the Gempro 250.
http://www.brianenos.com/store/be.scale_pd.html

brutal
03-05-2014, 13:51
That digital calipers on brianenos is the same one I picked up at Harbor Freight.

Brian
03-05-2014, 18:11
That digital calipers on brianenos is the same one I picked up at Harbor Freight.

LOL me too, I went out in the garage to dig mine up only to find they look like the exact same thing. Same deal with the spare battery too. I think mine came from Amazon though a while back (Neiko brand).

MAP
03-05-2014, 21:31
I've had a gem pro for several years. I'm very satisfied and would purchase another when the time comes.

Mike