@newbieshooter, good work in sharing your mini experiment. While small in sample, it does point to what many of us have correlated in our own testing.Bought some Peterson 6BR brass recently. Weighed 200 pieces as an exercise to see how uniform the cases are.
FF all the cases to 6BRAI.
- 188 weighed between 134.0-135.0 gr (more than 50% weighed 134.0-134.3)
- 2 weighed 131.x gr
- 5 weighed 132.x gr
- 5 weighed 133.5-133.8 gr
Shot cases in the 134.x range with a set powder charge: Average: 2923 fps
Then shot 4 cases from the 132.x (2gr less) range (same powder charge): 2909, 2917, 2914, 2917: Average 2914 fps.
Don't know if this is statistically significant/insignificant.
Even with a 2gr difference in case weight - the speeds of these lighter cases (in my setup) still appear to be within my load window...
YMMV
........Depending on how accurate or wide your node is, the size of your ES in those groups, as well as your goal for precision, those slower rounds might not be in the same window.
Would be interesting to see the muzzle velocity for these two groups. If you have it, please post it.View attachment 1174662
This is the weight sorted Norma 6.5x284 necked up to straight 284 I mentioned in the post above. I do not remember the variation in weights, but is was the 5 heaviest and 5 lightest in a box of 100.
On some brass there is a correlation, not sure it always is this way.
CW
The theory is that the interior shape is not what we can see, but we're getting a sense of the case internal volume. So the theory is changes in cartridge volume = changes in velocity.So I'm somewhat new to this ultimate accuracy game but I've been reloading for many years but just as a hunter and a 100 yard target plinker who likes to see just how accurate he can make his handloads so bear with me if I sound like a goof ball. So reading these responses and thinking to myself about the differences in case weight, there's nothing you as loaders can do to correct this issue and we dont know where the brass is thicker or thinner in respective cases. The symptom or result of heavier cases is that fact that they increase pressure which should or will cause increased velocity which will impact where the bullet strikes the target. Is my thinking correct? Is there a solution to a heavier case like reducing the powder charge by a tenth of a grain or some other value or is that akin to a cat chasing its tail?
So I'm somewhat new to this ultimate accuracy game but I've been reloading for many years but just as a hunter and a 100 yard target plinker who likes to see just how accurate he can make his handloads so bear with me if I sound like a goof ball. So reading these responses and thinking to myself about the differences in case weight, there's nothing you as loaders can do to correct this issue and we dont know where the brass is thicker or thinner in respective cases. The symptom or result of heavier cases is that fact that they increase pressure which should or will cause increased velocity which will impact where the bullet strikes the target. Is my thinking correct? Is there a solution to a heavier case like reducing the powder charge by a tenth of a grain or some other value or is that akin to a cat chasing its tail?
I did not capture the velocities.Would be interesting to see the muzzle velocity for these two groups. If you have it, please post it.
So I'm somewhat new to this ultimate accuracy game but I've been reloading for many years but just as a hunter and a 100 yard target plinker who likes to see just how accurate he can make his handloads so bear with me if I sound like a goof ball. So reading these responses and thinking to myself about the differences in case weight, there's nothing you as loaders can do to correct this issue and we dont know where the brass is thicker or thinner in respective cases. The symptom or result of heavier cases is that fact that they increase pressure which should or will cause increased velocity which will impact where the bullet strikes the target. Is my thinking correct? Is there a solution to a heavier case like reducing the powder charge by a tenth of a grain or some other value or is that akin to a cat chasing its tail?
In testing, how much variation in case weight is detectable at 600 or a 1000 yards in a BR/Dasher size case?
Or a better question, what is the acceptable tolerance per bin?
I have tested it a little and I think I can see .5gr and know I can 1.0gr variation in round robin case weight tests.
CW
With a few qualifications, case weight is inversely to proportional to case volume. The relationship is not always "perfect", meaning you cannot rely on weight differences between individual cases to provide exact differences in internal volume. Nonetheless, weight-sorting cases will generally provide significantly more uniform internal volume than doing nothing at all.
As to how much variance is significant, that is a more difficult question to answer in an all-encompassing manner. The simplest answer is that if case volume variance reaches a certain fraction of the total internal volume, it will start to show up in velocity measurements. As to exactly what that minimum value is, it will likely depend on the total case volume, and perhaps even the shape of the cartridge. I've never tried to calulate the minimum weight variance necessary to cause a detectable change in velocity for a given cartridge, it much easier just to load highest/lowest case weights from a Lot of brass, load them identically, and determine empirically whether your chronograph can detect the difference. If not, sorting them by weight probably won't do much. In a relatively small case such as the .223 Rem, the difference in velocity between the highest/lowest case weights can be as mush as 25 to 30 fps with Lapua brass.
If you happen to have such a Lot of brass that exhibits a noticeable velocity difference between heaviest/lightest case weights, it wouldn't be too difficult to select something like 10 each of the heaviest/lightest cases, weigh them, load them up identically and determine velocity with each, then determine actual water volume afterward. Armed with that information, as well as the density of brass, you could probably fudge up some numbers with respect to how much volume or case weight variance was necessary to be significant for that specific cartridge and brand of bass.
That would only work if you put your case on scale, fill the cases with powder to get to exact same weight on all cases. More brass, less powder.I'll give you my theory, but first a disclaimer: I'm not very good at this stuff relative to a lot of people here.
When in doubt I try to use math to guestimate things. The density of brass is 8.73g/cc. The density of smokeless powder is approx 0.97g/cc (varying by propellent, of course). That's roughly 9x of a difference.
.....
I think you should consider the effect of weight variations from different point.
In a case like 6-6.5x47, the rim weights about half the total weight. A 1 grain variation has about .5 weight difference in actual case body.
Some of those data series have a really good R-sq. That strongly suggest to me that for those cases, sorting by weight IS basically sorting by capacity. I'm kind of surprised to see the ES in those data sets though. 25gr of spread in the .243 seems large. But you said this was mixed brass, right?