Dale you are starting to scare me. I cannot help myself, I still weight every charge. I load a lot of H4831 what does not flow consistently from my powder measurer. I trickle charge the last few grains if needed or subtract the extra with a plastic spoon if it is over. The habits I developed regarding weighing charges have carried over to ball powders or smaller stick powders.
I have just come from my reloading bench from loading some Barnes TTSX bullets; in my world are pricy bullets whose accuracy exceeds most hunting bullets. I measured to the exit zero each charge. I normally do this if I am loading bulk bullets or the higher price bullets. My powder measure is close with ball powders or AA2015BR, but it is a little rougher with IMR4350 or H4831. I loaded thirty rounds with IMR4350 earlier, and the measure tossed all the loads within a half a grain. I then trickled the additional powder until the pointer was at zero.
The difference between a rough carpenter, and a finish carpenter?
I see no need to weigh charges in factory ammunition to determined consistency unless there is a problem. Numerous gun writers have done that over the years and published their articles. I did do that with the 303 British ammunition re-manufactured by Belmont. I weighed a bunch of charges and they were consistent. It shows they knew how to consistently load inaccurate ammunition. I dumped the powder, saved the prime cases and the Sierra bullets.
I have some factory 270 ammunition that is great in one rifle, and shoots patterns in another rifle. I have three rifles in 270 Winchester. I have found that my hunting loads maintain their accuracy between rifles.
My handloads have been more accurate than most of the factory loads I buy and I believe the consistency of powder weight is a factor. Others will argue otherwise, but I am on my clock.
necchi +1
“Factory rounds can be way off from each other even in the same box,,but what you get with factory ammo is factory ammo accuracy, if I was happy with that I likley wouldn't have started loading.”