It’s an EC tuner.I may have missed it but is this my tuner or a different one? If it's one of mine, I'm very happy to walk you through it but regardless, it might be worthwhile just to give the maker a call to discuss what increments to move in and what those increments should look like on the target. All tuners work on the same principle but there are substantial differences in small details regarding how they are best used.
Again, I'm very happy to help if I can. Just give me a call is all it takes. Pictures would help as well. I look for very distinct and predictable group shapes mostly but there's more to it than that. Every detail should support one another to come to a setting that I'd be confident in. Shooting small is great but knowing what to look for as it starts to go away and how to fix it, is what tuning is all about, on the fly.
I would do this also, but get your velocity as well. If it is down due to the new OAL then you may have to add .1gr of powder as well to get it back to where it was. JMOIt’s an EC tuner.
I just got a chance to measure my jam point again, the last time I measured it was 2.0880, it is now 2.1275. I’m going to load some rounds at the longer length and see what happens
In this situation turning the tuner may not have brought it back into tune but since it was a vertical change as opposed to the green dot group I believe it could have.Got a chance to go shoot this morning. I loaded them much longer, my original load was 2.098 this load is 2.1375. The group tightened right back up and I did not lose any velocity
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The green dot group is just fire form loads to warm/foul the barrel. The groups it was shooting before I loaded them long we’re just a much larger circle about double sizeIn this situation turning the tuner may not have brought it back into tune but since it was vertical as opposed to the green dot group I believe it could have.
I see. I thought you were showing a before and after bullet seating depth change.The green dot group is just fire form loads to warm/foul the barrel. The groups it was shooting before I loaded them long we’re just a much larger circle about double size
On your new length now, where are you from the touch point?( just curious).The green dot group is just fire form loads to warm/foul the barrel. The groups it was shooting before I loaded them long we’re just a much larger circle about double size
I’m Back to .010 jamOn your new length now, where are you from the touch point?( just curious).
In 600 rounds that seems to be an extreme amount of throat erosion???It’s an EC tuner.
I just got a chance to measure my jam point again, the last time I measured it was 2.0880, it is now 2.1275. I’m going to load some rounds at the longer length and see what happens
Gotta like that…Got a chance to go shoot this morning. I loaded them much longer, my original load was 2.098 this load is 2.1375. The group tightened right back up and I did not lose any velocity
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I thought so as well, with a bore scope I am seeing zero fire cracking. Comparing to another shooters comparator measurement I am closer to theirs now using the same reamer design but different reamers.In 600 rounds that seems to be an extreme amount of throat erosion???
stan
I have never seen a 50 degree temp change not affect velocity in a .223, regardless of powder used. Your group falling apart at increased temperature verifies that is likely what is going on with your load.See Mr Frank example above. It is not possible to have over a 50deg increase with no change in velocity and therefore barrel time as well.
It is quite common to get a "significant" difference in jam measurement after only a short number of rounds on a new barrel. It is likely very little to do with throat erosion - but rather the ironing out of the sharp edges from when your throating was cut - at the juncture where the lands start.In 600 rounds that seems to be an extreme amount of throat erosion???
stan
N140Maybe I missed it but what powder are you using.