Exactly and wish I would have looked earlierEnough to mean the difference between compacting the powder and crushing it if you’re on the edge.
Exactly and wish I would have looked earlierEnough to mean the difference between compacting the powder and crushing it if you’re on the edge.
lol is this really a thing?gonna have to chuck 'em in a drill and sand the ogives down until they're all the same
finish up with steel wool
yep, heres my setuplol is this really a thing?
Nice, I don’t currently have a lathe but I definitely could make a lighter one or something to hold a collet in a drill for sureyep, heres my setup
How often to you trim them? I have noticed inconsistencies in them but I figured it was down the pipe so why mess with it lolOk,
Had to mess with ya guys today.
-------------------------------------
(That's actually my setup to trim meplats)
-------------------------------------
Actually I haven't trimmed meplats until just recently,How often to you trim them? I have noticed inconsistencies in them but I figured it was down the pipe so why mess with it lol
Inconsistent eating an be caused by a few things.I am getting inconsistent seating depth ranging sometimes 5 to 6 thou out. The powder charge is the same but they do sometimes feel more compressed. I assume this is causing my bullet to have different seats. I get them all to the same length but it is annoying. All of the brass has been prepped exactly the same way as well. I am using Hornady brass but I am considering using alpha or Peterson brass thinking it may fix the issue but as I am new to reloading I do not want to be hasty.
My groups have been fine it seems but I have noticed every once in a while I get a spiked velo round. I marked every single bullet that I had a seat issue to see if that shot spiked in velocity and will find that out today.
I started a thread about my aggravation with the design of all the seating stems/inserts I've examined. They contact the bullet somewhere in the upper 30% of the tip. Some are worse than others.Inconsistent ogive form. Bullet seating stem contacts bullet way further forward than a bullet competitor. I bet if you made a comparator insert the same size as your seating stem, you would find your loaded rounds are very consistant. Ask me how I know .
I wonder when trimming how much weight you lose, not saying it would be a grain but I guess it could because like you said some of these bullets oal is way different than the others.Actually I haven't trimmed meplats until just recently,
I still need to test them and haven't had a chance to do that yet due to weather
The OAL is all over the place so I am going to equalize several different brands
Lapua, Berger, Sierra etc and see if it takes out any vertical at all
_-------------------
I am figuring I am not going to gain much just because 6mm Meplats are already small to begin with
But if it helps even 1/2" vertically at 600 yds then thats a decent gain.
--------------------
We'll see
Is the idea about getting the distance to the lands more consistent? Or do you just think it's better for concentricity?I started a thread about my aggravation with the design of all the seating stems/inserts I've examined. They contact the bullet somewhere in the upper 30% of the tip. Some are worse than others.
When time allows, I have a plan to move that to the lower 30%, very near the ogive.
I believe this will prove to be much more consistent, but right now, it's just a theory.
I understand your point, and I don't dispute that.Is the idea about getting the distance to the lands more consistent? Or do you just think it's better for concentricity?
If it's about more consistent jump, I've thought about that some time ago and don't really see where it'd really make any difference since distance to the lands isn't really all that important when seating off the lands. I came to this conclusion from reports from top end shooters and my own testing with how throat erosion hasn't been much a big factor (and why it's typically recommended that one doesn't "chase the lands"). But consistent seating depth (how far the base of the bullet is into the case along with the lengths of the bearing surfaces) is far more important than jump. So, the way I see it, whether your seating stem is making contact at the upper 30% of the ogive or the lower 30%, it really doesn't matter.![]()
Not very much, I'm only shaving maybe .005" off the nose so perhaps 3/10th grainI wonder when trimming how much weight you lose, not saying it would be a grain but I guess it could because like you said some of these bullets oal is way different than the others.
Ahh ok.Not very much, I'm only shaving maybe .005" off the nose so perhaps 3/10th grain
That setup rather reminds me of Erik Cortina’s April 1st video of him increasing the accuracy of bullets by chucking them in a lathe and counter sinking the base…yep, heres my setup
I agree with this. Most comparator inserts don’t contact the bullet anywhere of significance. They don’t actually touch where the bullet actually contacts the rifling. For my 7mm bullets, I found that a 6mm insert is close to where my seating stem contacts. That’s a measurement that actually has some meaning. I also get more consistent measurements here. The 7mm insert has absolutely no importance. I check bullets for total length and base to seating stem contactsIs the idea about getting the distance to the lands more consistent? Or do you just think it's better for concentricity?
If it's about more consistent jump, I've thought about that some time ago and don't really see where it'd really make any difference since distance to the lands isn't really all that important when seating off the lands. I came to this conclusion from reports from top end shooters and my own testing with how throat erosion hasn't been much a big factor (and why it's typically recommended that one doesn't "chase the lands"). But consistent seating depth (how far the base of the bullet is into the case along with the lengths of the bearing surfaces) is far more important than jump. So, the way I see it, whether your seating stem is making contact at the upper 30% of the ogive or the lower 30%, it really doesn't matter.![]()