my question is what could possibly make a bullet seat deeper in one group of cases than another? i mean, what physical force
assume same cartridge (6.5x47), bullets (140hybrid) etc. in this situation, 3 different seating dies (wilson, redding, forster) were used and without changing anything on the seating die, bullets in one group were seated consistently .020" deeper than another group. Very repeatable.
There is a difference in the cases between the two groups (number of times fired) but put that aside for a moment.
I can see how a couple of things could cause this:
1. bullets sticking in the seater and being pulled up slightly before releasing - but in this case, there is no mark from the stem and i'm using moderately light neck tension, and i would expect the consistency of the depth to vary much more than it does
2. compressed powder pushing the bullets back up - but in this case, these are nowhere close to compressed loads
so what else am i missing?
bullets are either being pushed to the same depth, and one of them is coming back up
or one is not being pushed as far as the other.
is it possible that the brass is springy and the brass itself is moving in the seating process? given the original use of wilson hand seater and small arbor press, i don't think i'm using enough force to move the brass 20 thou
thanks for any thoughts
assume same cartridge (6.5x47), bullets (140hybrid) etc. in this situation, 3 different seating dies (wilson, redding, forster) were used and without changing anything on the seating die, bullets in one group were seated consistently .020" deeper than another group. Very repeatable.
There is a difference in the cases between the two groups (number of times fired) but put that aside for a moment.
I can see how a couple of things could cause this:
1. bullets sticking in the seater and being pulled up slightly before releasing - but in this case, there is no mark from the stem and i'm using moderately light neck tension, and i would expect the consistency of the depth to vary much more than it does
2. compressed powder pushing the bullets back up - but in this case, these are nowhere close to compressed loads
so what else am i missing?
bullets are either being pushed to the same depth, and one of them is coming back up
or one is not being pushed as far as the other.
is it possible that the brass is springy and the brass itself is moving in the seating process? given the original use of wilson hand seater and small arbor press, i don't think i'm using enough force to move the brass 20 thou
thanks for any thoughts