/VH
Hillary ain't in jail, so leave me to hell alone!
Earlier this week, I spent a couple evenings sorting ~ 1k Berger 6.5 mm, 140 gn Hybrid bullets, lot # 7952, with my Bob Green comparator. Yes I know, I need to get a life. Anyway, after sorting, I actually counted the bullets and I thought the results might possibly be of some benefit or interest to someone else on here that also might be in need of a life.
If it turns out that this post is of no more use than obama, at least it won't take near as long to get rid of.
So, I sorted 502 bullets, Sunday evening and 502 bullets, Monday evening, as each of the two boxes contained 2 extras. I started by rinsing them in lacquer thinner and giving them a few minutes to dry cuz clean matters in this operation.
If I remember correctly, the Bob Green comparator instructions say to sort into groups that measure within .001" of each other but with what I have for a life, I decided to cut that in half and sort to .0005". Now, please understand that this was not extremely scientific. I may have screwed up a couple and the bullets that measured borderline, may have fallen in either group, kinda depending on how I felt at the moment.
For those not familiar with the Bob Green comparator, the idea is that it comparatively measures the longitudinal difference between bullets of the distance from roughly, where the seater stem makes contact on the ogive to roughly, close to the where the ogive and bearing surface intersect. Knowing that statement might be difficult to follow, even if I did get it right; basically by sorting with it, and if your seating force is consistent...and there are no other kinks thrown in; when you seat your bullets, all your loaded rounds will measure the same from the case head to the bullet ogive.
So, here are the results:
Out of the 1004 bullets, I grouped them into 6 main sets by .0005" increments which covered a total range of .003" and included 983 bullets, if I cyphered my take aways correctly.
There were a few outliers; 16 ea. measured shorter than my chosen range and/or acted goofy in the comparator. 4 ea. measured longer and/or acted goofy. 1 bullet, I dropped on a ceramic tile floor and I believe I damaged it in doing so. This makes a total of 21 outliers. The rest went like this:
4 ea @ .1570" - .1575"
57 ea @ .1575" - .1580"
152 ea @ .1580" - .1585"
347 ea @ .1585" - .1590"
356 ea @ .1590" - .1595"
67 ea @ .1595" - .1600"
I hope this is of some use or interest to someone. If not, we'll impeach the thread. Also seems to me Berger has been putting out some pretty consistent bullets, especially considering how many they run and the results on target are better than my shooting ability. Scenars have sorted very well for me, also. For some of the other brands, I'll have to buy some more green chili dip so I'll have enough plastic bowls to sort into.
If it turns out that this post is of no more use than obama, at least it won't take near as long to get rid of.
So, I sorted 502 bullets, Sunday evening and 502 bullets, Monday evening, as each of the two boxes contained 2 extras. I started by rinsing them in lacquer thinner and giving them a few minutes to dry cuz clean matters in this operation.
If I remember correctly, the Bob Green comparator instructions say to sort into groups that measure within .001" of each other but with what I have for a life, I decided to cut that in half and sort to .0005". Now, please understand that this was not extremely scientific. I may have screwed up a couple and the bullets that measured borderline, may have fallen in either group, kinda depending on how I felt at the moment.
For those not familiar with the Bob Green comparator, the idea is that it comparatively measures the longitudinal difference between bullets of the distance from roughly, where the seater stem makes contact on the ogive to roughly, close to the where the ogive and bearing surface intersect. Knowing that statement might be difficult to follow, even if I did get it right; basically by sorting with it, and if your seating force is consistent...and there are no other kinks thrown in; when you seat your bullets, all your loaded rounds will measure the same from the case head to the bullet ogive.
So, here are the results:
Out of the 1004 bullets, I grouped them into 6 main sets by .0005" increments which covered a total range of .003" and included 983 bullets, if I cyphered my take aways correctly.
There were a few outliers; 16 ea. measured shorter than my chosen range and/or acted goofy in the comparator. 4 ea. measured longer and/or acted goofy. 1 bullet, I dropped on a ceramic tile floor and I believe I damaged it in doing so. This makes a total of 21 outliers. The rest went like this:
4 ea @ .1570" - .1575"
57 ea @ .1575" - .1580"
152 ea @ .1580" - .1585"
347 ea @ .1585" - .1590"
356 ea @ .1590" - .1595"
67 ea @ .1595" - .1600"
I hope this is of some use or interest to someone. If not, we'll impeach the thread. Also seems to me Berger has been putting out some pretty consistent bullets, especially considering how many they run and the results on target are better than my shooting ability. Scenars have sorted very well for me, also. For some of the other brands, I'll have to buy some more green chili dip so I'll have enough plastic bowls to sort into.