I have been experimenting with the stoney point oal gauge with numerous calibers and bullets. At the same time I have used the method described by Erik Cortina of seating a bullet long and using the bolt to seat the bullet on a case with .002 neck tension.
The results were interesting for my rifles and equipment. I use the stoney point gauge keeping hard pressure on the cartridge then pressing as firmly on the metal bullet rod as my finger will tolerate and then locking in place.
Comparing these 2 results is where it gets interesting the stoney point result is almost exactly equal to the number generated by Erik's hard jam -.02 (YMMV). This result has repeated for me so consistently that I now start load development at the number given by the stoney point guage when used as above and label it hard jam -.02 in my notebook. All of the rounds I have tried easily chamber and eject without the bullet getting stuck. I am interested to know if anyone else has compared these methods and their results.
The results were interesting for my rifles and equipment. I use the stoney point gauge keeping hard pressure on the cartridge then pressing as firmly on the metal bullet rod as my finger will tolerate and then locking in place.
Comparing these 2 results is where it gets interesting the stoney point result is almost exactly equal to the number generated by Erik's hard jam -.02 (YMMV). This result has repeated for me so consistently that I now start load development at the number given by the stoney point guage when used as above and label it hard jam -.02 in my notebook. All of the rounds I have tried easily chamber and eject without the bullet getting stuck. I am interested to know if anyone else has compared these methods and their results.