Well it takes me all of 45 seconds to remove the ejector with a finishing nail and a hammer...
It takes me about 45 seconds to remove the firing pin as I have to put on an old sneaker that has shoe laces...
No special tool needed. Its only pushing one 1/2" pin out and unscrewing.
Leave the 20 ogives and confidence intervals at home, nerd. Test three bullets and youll find that you get the same number each time. And a thousandth (or half of that which is what people are referencing) isnt a big deal here but knowing that the loose neck and jam method is actually .015 jammed and not the point where you first touch the lands is useful information.
I am sorry that my post annoyed you.
By any chance would you happen to have any valuable info to share on the validity of the various ogive comparator tools that have been sold for some time which in most instances would be used to sample more than 3 rounds of ammo. Statistically a sample size of 3 is inadequate for most sampling and measuring 100's of rounds of ammo or more.to determine ogives would be a waste of time - thus a reasonable number of 20 was suggested to get some idea of what would be expected for values on each side of the 95 % confidence distribution. Playing around with this stuff would not be needed if the ogives of these 3 bullets were the same as every bullet in the box but seeing a variation on first contact positions I doubt this is true. We appear to be into a discussion where tolerances of .001 are considered. Could I guess some standard penetration (jam) of .015 inches into some chamber throat to reach some standard might not work for every chamber due to less than fine BR gun-smithing, uneven wear or variations in leade angles.
Thank-you for the info on pin removal. 45 seconds is 4.5 times longer than 10 seconds and nails are real cheap - the time interval is growing.
This stuff is real educational and I am sucking up info like a sponge - so far I have read that assumptions are made that ogive positions are equal using a sample of 3, seating depths of down to .0005 can be done by feel, .015 inch (jammed?) is sort of a standard, tolerances down to .0002 between bullet and chamber are considered, a wide range of opinions like "touch point" and "jammed" are presented, measuring chamber dimensions down to .0005 to .0002, and lots of other mega precise stuff..
All of this began with an inquiry concerning COAL using the non-bench rest 87 grain Hornady VMax bullet and quickly morphed into a real esoteric exchange, unfortunately including my quickly dismissed statistical stuff that approached social unacceptability. I hope the OP gets good results with his 6 BR & 87 Vmaxes.
My plans now are to acquire a Magneto speed and a PTG comparator. Selecting my .20 Practical rodent rifle I will experiment with Alliant AR comp and IMR 8208 and the 40 grain H VMax bullet. I will record velocities to determine average max (up) and min (down) using a 95 % distribution with a number of cases (not of the brass type) ranging from 50 to 1000 expecting the differences between max (up) and min (down) to be less upon increasing the number of cases (not of the brass type). This should give me an idea of what I could expect upon actual shooting. Striving for some aggregate in the "ones" at 100 yards would be a foolish and impossible consideration, possibly resulting in social ostracizing out on the prairie, but some of the BR techniques would be of value. Taking multiple shots at tiny targets at extended ranges and maintaining a good "batting" average (frequency of hits) would make velocity variations resulting in drop values a consideration. The 95 % confidence level should prove to be useful in selecting a powder and load to provide optimum results for practical extended range rodent shooting. Why not?; some of this stat stuff is in the Berger manual. Supplied chrony software usually includes the socially acceptable S.D. (standard deviation); the S.D. is a required calculation for confidence distributions.
The PTG bullet comparator, should provide an idea of the ogive quality of the 40 gr. VMax and other bullets. Not being OCD, I don't intend to measure all the 1800 bullets including .20's, .22's, .24's, and .26's or play around with .0005 seating depths but I will sample 20 of each type and using a 95 % confidence level see what might be expected for the rest of the 800 to 200 of a certain type looking at variations within each lot. Possibly limited accuracy testing might show differences. I would expect some microns of erosion to occur every time I pulled the trigger.
This thread is 3 pages long!; it was kicked off by a simple inquiry about COAL with 87 VMax bullets using a 6mm BR. Hopefully, my planned thread where I play around with some simple stats will result in the same interest - if not I will a have a useful tool somewhat like the discussion in the Berger manual.