Ive have a box of 100 gr Hornady amax I bought for my 6.5CM. I thought it might be novel to try a little bullet so I started by checking the CBTO measurement. I then put a bullet in the neck so that the bearing surface gets a normal full neck grab. The bullet has a .13 jump in that configuration which is excessive for any decent accuracy expectation. The COAL was 2.62 so plenty of room in my mag.
And then I looked at the Hornady manual for their COAL with that bullet and it was 2.71. I usually never look their published COALS but did in this case. So I set up a bullet in my comparator at their 2.71 and I had barely half the neck grabbing the bullet. The jump is now .066 which is still on the high side but more doable I guess
So what to do?? I read about some guys shooting the 95g and 100g in the creed without any mention of jump and throat length. So are they inadvertently doing it with a massive jump and proper neck grab or are they pushing their bullets way out on the neck and compensating for this with more tension?
IMO these bullets dont really fit the cartridge and chamber. Thats obvious. I am happy with my 120-123 grainers which where designed to fit so wondering if its just a waste of time to play with anything smaller than that. Or is it acceptable to seat that long? I have always followed the old school rule of bullet dia to neck grab length so it just looks odd and delicate to me to have a bullet half hanging out of the neck and especially for feeding with my mag.
And then I looked at the Hornady manual for their COAL with that bullet and it was 2.71. I usually never look their published COALS but did in this case. So I set up a bullet in my comparator at their 2.71 and I had barely half the neck grabbing the bullet. The jump is now .066 which is still on the high side but more doable I guess
So what to do?? I read about some guys shooting the 95g and 100g in the creed without any mention of jump and throat length. So are they inadvertently doing it with a massive jump and proper neck grab or are they pushing their bullets way out on the neck and compensating for this with more tension?
IMO these bullets dont really fit the cartridge and chamber. Thats obvious. I am happy with my 120-123 grainers which where designed to fit so wondering if its just a waste of time to play with anything smaller than that. Or is it acceptable to seat that long? I have always followed the old school rule of bullet dia to neck grab length so it just looks odd and delicate to me to have a bullet half hanging out of the neck and especially for feeding with my mag.