Unfortunately, "readability" has little to do with "precision" or "repeatability". Under ~$500, the strain gauge used is far too susceptible to noise, both on the line and over the air. This is what causes these scales to flutter and frequently lose zero.
When a scale has lost zero, do you have any idea when it lost zero? Was it on the way up to the weight in the pan? On the way down to the negative weight absent the pan? Or on the way back up to zero? You have no clue which.
Some of these scales hold zero better than others via programming that ignores small changes in weight from the current reading. Unfortunately, that makes trickling into those scales a bit of a pain since with most every trickle one needs to tap the pan to force a reweighing.
The "lab grade" scales are those that do not use a strain gauge. AFAIK, at this time the least expensive of these is the A&D FX120i available at ~$500. The scale is so good that aftermarket devices (AutoTrickler, AutoThrower) use the "outdated" serial port on the scale to turn it into a +/- one particle dispenser.
While $500 may be out of reach for some (~$720 with an AutoTrickler), saying these scales are not suitable for reloading is just flat out wrong.