Tom,
Using George's tool the way he showed us, I can sort 6-8 bullets per minute. Is your method faster?
ClayHas anyone actually tested how seating force effects accuracy? Assuming of course, all the brass was prepared the same way.
If half of your rounds required 12 on your gauge (K&M or Hydro) to seat properly, will those hit the target in a different place than the rounds that required 15 or 18 on the gauge? If so, how much difference on the gauge is required to have it show up on target?
CW
Has anyone actually tested how seating force effects accuracy? Assuming of course, all the brass was prepared the same way.
If half of your rounds required 12 on your gauge (K&M or Hydro) to seat properly, will those hit the target in a different place than the rounds that required 15 or 18 on the gauge? If so, how much difference on the gauge is required to have it show up on target?
CW
Good stuff, thanks Tom!Keeping brass on the same cycle, and otherwise good precision practices used, it don't mean a thing until you know what caused it. It matters to me so much, that I take a couple readings on my first few sighters. Once the general range has been noted, I seat too fast to be able to get readings. I do this for seating consistency, as it actually does matter.
Tom
1/2% total range is pretty tight.
Did you keep track of the 1 thru 20 and do a weight check of dry empty cases?
Distilled water with just a drop of dish soap to reduce surface tension also works and is much closer to 1 g/cm3
Has anyone actually tested how seating force effects accuracy? Assuming of course, all the brass was prepared the same way.
If half of your rounds required 12 on your gauge (K&M or Hydro) to seat properly, will those hit the target in a different place than the rounds that required 15 or 18 on the gauge? If so, how much difference on the gauge is required to have it show up on target?
CW
What do you credit the difference in seating pressure to?Most recently, a load with my 300 WSM produced two .875" 5-shot groups at 200 yds with light seating pressure (20 psi) while heavier seating pressure gave me an average of .61" (60 psi) over four groups. The load was the same.
What do you credit the difference in seating pressure to?
CW
There are some powders that want the brass to have a death grip on the bullet.It was on purpose. I established the seating pressure by changing neck tension.
That is crazy close...... amazing really.View attachment 1166622 View attachment 1166621 View attachment 1166623 View attachment 1166624 I’m getting new batch of brass ready for my Dasher 200ea Lapua 6mm BR
2x fired, resized, cleaned with SS pins and trimmed
This morning I was checking internal case capacity using 91% isopropyl alcohol and the results look pretty consistent after 20 cases tested
Now you got me thinking.There are some powders that want the brass to have a death grip on the bullet.
I understand cause and effect....... just do not ask me to explain why.
CW
There are some powders that want the brass to have a death grip on the bullet.
I understand cause and effect....... just do not ask me to explain why.
CW
Why is this important?1/2% total range is pretty tight.
Did you keep track of the 1 thru 20 and do a weight check of dry empty cases?
Distilled water with just a drop of dish soap to reduce surface tension also works and is much closer to 1 g/cm3
Tom, what is the black gizzy on the indicator?Clay,
Bullets are pretty simple, group them base to ogive, and then base to seater stem. This, if nothing else, gives consistent seated length to land relationship.
Base to tip is often overlooked, I sort this regardless, as it's about BC consistency. George Macdonald makes a great tool to go with your indicator stand. I love my I gaging 2" travel digital that @dmoran found online a couple years back. I never move my bullet and measure(sort) all 3 things.
View attachment 1166438
View attachment 1166439
I must admit I've given up on Roy's for the two ogive readings. They basically are good enough to check your, and your toolings' limitations lol.a simple check of your seated match rounds will identify any "accidents".
Tom