Follow along with the video below to see how to install our site as a web app on your home screen.
Note: This feature may not be available in some browsers.
so if you change bullets or shape you need a different part for seater that will get kind of pricey and confusing ... just sayingI believe that this comes the closest of any that are commercially available.
Back when March scopes came out, I found it hard to believe that shooters would spend that much more for a scope. When the Bix trigger first showed up, it was the same thing. Evidently I have a pattern of failing to understand the market for premium shooting products.so if you change bullets or shape you need a different part for seater that will get kind of pricey and confusing ... just saying
Since i am single feeding I am trying to maintain consistent seating depth in relation to the ogive/bearing surface to the lands. As mentioned earlier the cartridge oal if not feeding through a magazine does not have much Bering. To me, and I maybe missing something, the 2 things most important is the ogive to lands/jumb and the internal case volume of the loaded round. Both need to be as consistent as possible.It depends on the bullet , RCBS makes a different seating plug for the long distance low drag bullets , most seating plugs work off the ogive. If your setting up your die for measuring OAL it will stop at the ogive but the tip of the bullets will be off, giving you different length measurements
Thanks, I bet it does. Which is my point if a bushing like device contacted the bullet and was replaceable it would be cheaper as well as more consistent and accurate.so if you change bullets or shape you need a different part for seater that will get kind of pricey... just saying
Your kidding me right ? I am fairly confident I have a grasp on ogives.. I have a graph of 4 different short range bullets. I made 3 of the bullet dies. here are the #'s bullet "a" @ .180 dia. .629 , "b" .652, "c" .625 , "d" .629 @ ,225 dia. "a" .454, "b" .468, "c" .474, "d" .456 , @ 1* 30" angle "a" .219 "b" .263 "c" .251 and "d" .233 there is quite a HUGH difference in ogives. in checking one lot on a comparator there is a difference from bullet to bullet. If you think seating depth is greater than .001 perhaps you should discuss this with the Short Range H.O.F. points leader you are sadly mistaken . this is what I love about forums so much bad information being thrown out......The 'ogive' is the entire length of bullet nose.
Seater plugs contact roughly 1/3 up the ogive from the mepat (not even close to the tip).
They contact where they do in balance of datum & angle that provides consistent seating, instead of wedging with seating forces.
Seating accuracy is VERY important for bolt guns.
But it doesn't matter what datums you use. Only that you ALWAYS use the same datums that your gun proved as best with testing.
And whether you use standard CBTO or a shoulder datum to an ogive datum (STO) doesn't matter either.
Your shoulders should be bumped to a consistency of well under 1thou, so a difference between CBTO & STO consistency would be within 1thou. Seating windows are greater than this.
It's alotta nothin there..