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than those formed using separate full length and bushing dies?
Until recently I used to depin, use a Redding body die, then follow up with a Lee Collet neck die. When I went to small flash hole cases the universal depinner had too large a pin so I bought the Redding FL bushing die to size and depin. However I just purchased a universal depinner that has a small flash hole pin. The Redding FL does ok but about 10% of my cases end up with .0015 or more runout so I think I will switch back to the body die/collet neck die again
you think you could do half and half and give us a report on what that .001 runout does to your group size and how much extra time it takes to use 3 dies as opposed to one? I think it would be enlightening to the readers to see if they think it will be beneficial to them.
I’m not saying runout doesn’t matter.
I’m not saying it does.
I hold no national titles. And I’m not overly concerned with runout. I will toss an obviously crooked piece of brass...
I’m sure those that do hold national titles are concerned with runout... but then again they are concerned with everything.... which is what makes them great.
But about a month ago I sorted a loaded 50 round box of ammunition. Why? Because I bought a gauge that I didn’t need and I was bored.
The average was about .004 if I culled the six pieces that were .006-.008
I also had five that were .002 or less....
I took those 11 rounds to the range.
I’m shooting a .284 with 180 smks over 4831.
Testing was done at 100 yards
The five that were .002 shot about .6
Which is about a two tenths worse than the gun normally shoots.
Fluke?
The 6 bullets with “excessive” runout shot in the .4s
Witnessed by two other shooters.
The whole deal could be a fluke. I don’t know. But I am going to sort them again in lots of five and shoot 5 different groups just out of curiosity. Needless to say.... I just load my bullets and shoot them. They’re precise enough for me
Being able to produce great results does not endow one with a deeper knowledge of what or why things happen.I was listening to a guy at St Louis BR club and he told the group standing there that if you seated in to the lands that it didn't matter about run out as the lead straightened out the round to fit the chamber. After his group walked away I asked my host if this guy knew what he was talking about and he said the guy was a national champion bench rest shooter. I don't know what to think.
The base is bigger than the rest of the bulletWhen you push a tapered bullet (male) into a tapered (female hole how could it not center the bullet if push in far enough?
Yes, the bullet ogive will center in the rifling. But it's axis is at a small angle to the bore axis. The rest of the bullet will eventually center in the bore, but the rifling engraving on the bullet jacket where first started will be uneven around the bullet. That unbalances the bullet a teeny weenie bit. It jumps off the bore axis upon axis due to centrifugal forces.When you push a tapered bullet (male) into a tapered (female) hole how could it not center the bullet if push in far enough?