Re: Lee perfect powder measure?
"..kind of skeptic about the lee perfect powder measure. Give me some opinions."
Yeah, that's a common view. Fact is, and to the outrage of some, it's about as good as powder measures get and is maybe the best available for coarse rifle powders that are difficult to drop consistanly. Of course you could get a digital dumpster for what, 10-15 times the Lee Perfect's cost? (Not me!)
"Accuracy" of the charge is dependant on how we set a measure. No volume measuring dispenser of solids can possibly be totally consistant in weight and the coarser the material the worse the result. Most of us just set the measure so the average drop is as close as we need. Only with those rounds demanding best consistancy usually get weighed. Learning how to operate any measure makes the consistancy better. Setting a measure just below the desired charge and "trickling" it up to weigh is the normal practice and the closer, more consistant we can measure our charges the faster we can trickle them up. The Lee is good for that.
More costly (iron) measures tend to work better with ball powders because the Lee drum MUST be well adjusted or it will leak powder a little bit. But that's a user function.
ALL drum type measures - what we use - tend to allow thin flake powders (handgun and shotgun types)to get between the drum and body, and that causes binding. When (not if) it happens, they need disassembly and cleaning with a small pad of 4/0 steel wool weted with denatured alcohol to remove the powder smears.
If you really want an iron measure, look at Redding's 3BR. And if you will use it for both large rifle and handgun, add the optional pistol metering chamber. That measure system is as good as it gets unless you spend several hundreds of dollars for some others that don't drop enough for large rifle charges.