when you least expect it....I just checked ten of my .260 Rem practice rounds measuring base to ogive, 1 of the ten was .001 short the rest were dead on according to my Starrett dial indicator.
The cases are well into the teens on reloads and the necks are about as work hardened as they come. They have never been annealed and have never been turned. These were loaded with inexpensive practice bullets, Barnes Match Burners @$135 per 500. The cases were sized with a Redding FL bushing die to give me .003 neck compression. The cases were sized and the bullets seated in a Lee Turret press not some finely machined work of art and the kicker is that the seating die is a old Forster Micrometer that I bought when I started shooting .308. I have never bothered buying a .260 seating die. By all reasoning my seating depths should be erratic, yet they are not.
Like I said I am neither bragging or complaining just confused as to why I break all the rules and have no issues
What seating stem are you using for your chosen bullet? .002 -.003 is a wide variance for initial seating. With a micrometer top and correct stem, you should be closer to .0005 - .001 delta between rounds. IME, when I switched to a VLD version of the stem to seat hybrid bullets, all the variance tightened up in my seating.I definitely don’t have the expertise that many here do, but I always short seat my bullets, measure CBTO then press the rest of the way in, typically .003-.005” deeper than the initial seating. I tend to have variation of around .002-.003” extreme spread on CBTO after first seating. Anything outside that becomes my foulers.
If you subscribe to nodes in seating depth, depending on what your accuracy needs are, don’t worry too much about it - 0.004” difference can be within your tune window.
All that being said, neck tension definitely affects seating depth. My 3x fired brass without annealing tends to make my seating a little... crunchier than fresh brass
Have you sorted bullets by bullet base to ogive? I have no experience with Berger but I would not be surprised if they vary by a thou or few. I find this with other brands, especially Nosler BT and Accubond. Interestingly Swift Scirocco II 180 gr 30 cal have been very consistent demonstrating 1 or 2 thou variance at the most.Why am I getting inconsistent measurements? I’m trying to seat to 2.175 base to Ogive and it seems to vary between 2.174-2.178. I’m loading Berger 140gr Hybrids and using an RCBS gold medal adjustable seater. I assume this has something to do with the seating stem in the die? Is there anything that can be done about it? Maybe it’s time to upgrade to a Whidden with a stem specific to this bullet.
Inconsistent neck tension is the most.likely cause.
Use a Expander Mandrel to size the inside of the necks all the same.
HB
andAnother vote for inconsistent neck tension. Annealing your brass once your past the first few firings will also help with neck tension.
Tolerance is best determined by your accuracy goal / requirement. IME, 1 or 2 thou can ruin group accuracy if your seating depth node is narrow. Ie; exactly 0.0xx, or if it is only 0.002” wide. Such provides little or no allowance for bullet variability. A 0.003”+ wide node provides much more practical forgiveness.What tolerance should we consider good? +-.0005? +- .001? +-.002?
I'm usually withing +-.002. as a new reloader I'm still struggling with knowing what tolerances are acceptable and what are not.
Thanks
I use a spinning nylon brush to smooth out the rough carbon inside the case necks , not removing it all just smooth it a bit to ensure consistent seatingThanks for all the info guys. As much as people recommend an arbor press I’m not quite ready to dump my current gear and go in a different direction. I will try sorting my bullets first and see if that makes a difference. I’m using a basic Hornady caliper and insert. Is there a gold standard caliper I should consider?
As far as neck tension, what’s the solution? Will a better sizing die help that? Will my new Whidden die do a better job than my old RCBS die and give me better neck tension or is annealing the only solution?
My process for brass prep is as follows for my once fired Hornady brass, de-prime, wet tumble with SS media, lube with Hornady 1 shot, run my Whidden FL sizer and bump .002, trim with a manual trimmer, prime, and seat.
I should also mention I’m not a BR shooter (that may be obvious). My goal is 1/4-1/2 minute groups consistently out to 1000 yards. Most of my time is spent shooting prone off a bipod at 100-300 yards.