I appreciate all the responses and figured I would get a variety of answers. Background and response to a few:
My sole focus here is extreme accuracy in 1,000 yard Benchrest competition. I sort my fully prepped cases into sets matched by weight to .1gr even though many tell me it is a waste of time. While doing so I measure the neck thickness in 3-4 places on every case as I turn them-my last batch of cases was 500 Lapua 6BR's. I sort base to ogive even on custom hand made bullets while many say "Just shoot them". I weigh each charge to the kernel of powder. Many say this is not necessary but I have proved to myself that it matters. I have been annealing after each firing with an AMP annealer and although I get incredibly consistent seating pressures, I plan on testing not anneanilg this year. Weighing these primers took only 2.25 hours so why wouldn't I sort them. What you need to understand is I don't look at any of these things as extra work or even work at all. I love it. In the last two or three years I have watched my smallest groups at 1,000 yards drop from about 7" when my goal was under 1/2 moa, to barely over 3" and I'm happy but still not content. My current goal is to shoot in the 2's and the one after that will be to shoot in the 1's. I hope it never ends.
Last year I put together a Dasher and it was the most accurate rifle I had ever owned, 3.5" at 1K. I sold it after 6 months. I had determined it wasn't truly competitive at 1K. I got my WSM down to shooting under 1/2 moa at 1K. It's gone too. This year I will be testing two 6 BRA's. I can't wait to break in the barrels and get them shooting.
Everyone has different goals and that's fine, I just wanted you to understand where I was coming from.
In response to post #2, #8, #25, #27 and #29, I have proved to myself here http://forum.accurateshooter.com/threads/weight-sorting-primers-test.3966861/ and in other testing that the cup and anvil are extremely uniform which means the variation in weight comes from the priming compound. I have even weighed the ash residue and just so you know it is .002G with Federal 205M's. This now makes it very easy to check cup and anvil combined weights after firing without disassembly or cleaning. EDIT, add # 42 and 43 to this list.
In response to #34, no I'm not crazy, maybe I go a little overboard, but not crazy!
In response to #35, no, I'm not bored, I think it's fun. In fact this weekend I'll be sorting 1,000 CCI's.
Thanks again everyone. Good shooting.
My sole focus here is extreme accuracy in 1,000 yard Benchrest competition. I sort my fully prepped cases into sets matched by weight to .1gr even though many tell me it is a waste of time. While doing so I measure the neck thickness in 3-4 places on every case as I turn them-my last batch of cases was 500 Lapua 6BR's. I sort base to ogive even on custom hand made bullets while many say "Just shoot them". I weigh each charge to the kernel of powder. Many say this is not necessary but I have proved to myself that it matters. I have been annealing after each firing with an AMP annealer and although I get incredibly consistent seating pressures, I plan on testing not anneanilg this year. Weighing these primers took only 2.25 hours so why wouldn't I sort them. What you need to understand is I don't look at any of these things as extra work or even work at all. I love it. In the last two or three years I have watched my smallest groups at 1,000 yards drop from about 7" when my goal was under 1/2 moa, to barely over 3" and I'm happy but still not content. My current goal is to shoot in the 2's and the one after that will be to shoot in the 1's. I hope it never ends.
Last year I put together a Dasher and it was the most accurate rifle I had ever owned, 3.5" at 1K. I sold it after 6 months. I had determined it wasn't truly competitive at 1K. I got my WSM down to shooting under 1/2 moa at 1K. It's gone too. This year I will be testing two 6 BRA's. I can't wait to break in the barrels and get them shooting.
Everyone has different goals and that's fine, I just wanted you to understand where I was coming from.
In response to post #2, #8, #25, #27 and #29, I have proved to myself here http://forum.accurateshooter.com/threads/weight-sorting-primers-test.3966861/ and in other testing that the cup and anvil are extremely uniform which means the variation in weight comes from the priming compound. I have even weighed the ash residue and just so you know it is .002G with Federal 205M's. This now makes it very easy to check cup and anvil combined weights after firing without disassembly or cleaning. EDIT, add # 42 and 43 to this list.
In response to #34, no I'm not crazy, maybe I go a little overboard, but not crazy!
In response to #35, no, I'm not bored, I think it's fun. In fact this weekend I'll be sorting 1,000 CCI's.
Thanks again everyone. Good shooting.
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