IMHO I believe you can jump over the best seating depth by using 5 Thou increments. I use .003 till two bullet holes touch, then fine tune with .002, then .001.i use 5 and then fine tune with 2
had a .3" go into .1'S on a .002 change
^^^^^^^What he said^^^^^^^^^^I would suggest going the link below at this site and follow the instructions. They worked for me for both VLD and regular bullets.
http://bulletin.accurateshooter.com/2009/03/berger-tips-for-loading-vld-bullets/
Another thing to consider is what is .000 jump. The test is all relative to your own method of determining .000 jump so it's not critical as long as your consistant. It does come into play when you discuss .010" jump with someone else and he uses hard jamb as .000 and you use soft touch as .000.
BTW, I use .003, sometimes .0025 since its halfway between marks on the Wilson seater.View attachment 1033748
3 thousandths spreads of head clearance let's my reloads test 1/2 to 2/3 MOA over 15 to 20 shots at long range. Small bullet jump spread is more important to me than small head clearance spread.Yea, if you hire slave labor to do your reloading. Myself, I find a half thousanths and look to improve.
.010" X 4 different ones. Starting with bullet shank at neck shoulder junction, if magazine and chamber allow.seating depth increments
I, too, agree. Lots of folks don't know how rimless bottleneck rounds fit their chambers when fired.Just thought I'd mention we can do better, as bump consistency is one of the things that matters.
I, too, agree. Lots of folks don't know how rimless bottleneck rounds fit their chambers when fired.
Some chase the rifling as throats erode away down the barrel. Others dont. Some soft-seat bullets long so they push back to zero jump when chambered so it and head clearance are zero for every shot.