It might blow some minds,but in my most accurate and winning 308 barrel, 0.007 interference fit was the most accurate. Not only did I validate this multiple times, but it continues to shoot lights out after 3050 rounds. I have some theories about this, but the target has the final say. Drew
how close to the lands is the bullet ?
( and yes all rifles are dif)
what discipline are you shooting what rifle ?
185 jug, 0.016 off near beginning of barrel life but chasing lands turned out to be a mistake, so now probably 0.050 off but haven't checked in 1500 rounds. FTR . This rifle, but that picture was 2 years ago after half the 2016 season. More hardware has been accumulated since (only picture I have at moment)
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........bullet pull would be VERY roughly linear up to about the yield point of the neck. That would be about .002 expansion IF the brass was 1/4 hard. .
i started with .001" with neck turned 243 brass for a single shot 40x. After many reloadings, with no annealing , bullets became loose.001 neck tension (hold).
This is not a question anyone can answer for you. There are many variables that effect whether a combo will want light or heavy neck tension. And even knowing all of those, you still have to test it to know for sure.
Yield point of brass. Interesting.yield point of the neck
modulus of elasticity- Cartridge Brass-
Material is 70 copper/30 zinc with trace amounts of lead & iron , called C26000. Material starts to yield at 15,000 PSI when soft (annealed), and 63,000 PSI when hard.
Material yields, but continues to get stronger up to 47,000 PSI when soft, and 76,000 PSI
when work hardened. Modulus of Elasticity is 16,000,000 PSI. This means to pull a 1.000 inch long strip to 1.001 inch long induces a 16,000 PSI stress.
So if you pull a 1.000 inch strip to 1.005 inch long, you get about 76,000 PSI, which is the max obtainable.