I wanted something handier than the adjustable bench measure for a woods walk and had no time to find and get the right sized one online, so I made this powder measure from copper tubing and cross-pinned oversized dowel plug roughly shaped and then drilled to hang it:
It may not be pretty or HC, but it works great and is lighter than the standard brass ones. Cost was as close to zero as you can get. I can't imagine something similar hasn't been done many times in the past, and I actually like the way it looks in context
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The main reason, however, that I wanted to post this is that I found very little information handy on determining approximate size for a measure, and what I did find was not completely satisfying.
What I believe to be a straightforward and close approximation is this:
Capacity in grains = (Pipe_ID/2)2 * pi * Pipe_Length * 248.047where:
Pipe_ID is inside diameter of pipe (or cavity) in inches
pi = 3.14159...
Pipe_Length is unobstructed length inside pipe (or cavity) in inchesYou can also start with the capacity desired and ID of cavity and determine the length necessary by rearranging things.
Pipe_Length = Capacity_in_Grains/((Pipe_ID/2)2 * pi * 248.047)I couldn't seem to find a conversion factor for cubic inches to grains, except implicitly in one place where it seemed to be off by an order of magnitude when compared to measurements of chargers that I have. In that case, the formula seemed somewhat over-complicated in my opinion as well, so I simplified it to the above form.
Note that I realize the volumetric measurement of grains (a measure of weight) is approximate anyway, which explains to my satisfaction why the conversion is difficult to find. This is, therefore, a "rule of thumb" more than anything. Obviously, verify the capacity with a known good measure before use: Using larger diameter pipe, especially, the capacity can go up pretty quickly with relatively small changes in length. If anyone finds this formula in error or has a better, more exact, or otherwise preferable version, please correct me. Otherwise, I hope it will be useful as a guide or starting point.