Just how low do you go with that beam balance?
I've an Acculab 200 gram 0.01 and am very pleased
to have. With it I draw the line at 1.00 gram minimum
so the interest in a rare use of a powder balance. Dan
My Acculab 200 is a version that reads to 0.1g. My setup has both scales handy at hand to use and I've just gotten into the habit of using the powder scale on the smaller measures. My recipes are on spreadsheets and I simply have the conversions done and in front of me when I go to mix things. I've attached a typical recipe with a few small-weight components. I feel better with my equipment to measure for instance 23.1 grains of glycin than 1.5g on the inexpensive digital.
Our metrologist suggests to us that if we are adding key, trace components that even on some multi-thousand $$ units at our lab, we should add a 50g weight to the tare to get away from the extreme end of the load cell range. It may be interesting for you to try your scale at various points of its range in this manner and see if the small weight remains constant and whether there is load cell "memory" when going from one end of its range and up and back through its range. If it seems consistent, I suppose there is little need to bother with the supplemented tare weight routine for darkroom duty for you.
You should see what we go through to weigh certain things with vacuum chambered units kept in +/- 1°, humidity-controlled clean rooms and other units that use helium to displace a vacuum chamber to measure porosity, etc of particles. I'm still in a sort of wonder at the sensitivity of some of these devices. If I had a scale like yours with 0.01 sensitivity, I would use it just as you do and perhaps see if it's any more consistent away from its load cell limits as mentioned. Another thought is that using a consistent technique for batch to batch behavior is likely more important than splitting hairs on scales? I especially use scale care when doing small batches of a developer that I may simply want a one trial look at as I have way too many liter bottles sitting here with one film test of chemical consumed
and didn't have a reason to get back to the project. I'm more apt to rely on the balance in that case.