NC/Br Shooter
Silver $$ Contributor
If it's border line needing a retune. Re-establish the seating depth with tuner on zero. or in the middle
After 20 years with tuners, my thoughts. If you use the tuner to get a load when the load goes away from you it might well be.....away away. If you get a load with the tuner in what I refer to as neutral you can very quickly 95% of the time with s small adjustment on way or the other be back on small groups.Which one of two methods: (a) tuner, (b) seating depth for tuning your rifle do you find easier, less time and material consuming and more consistent?
I am not a tuner guy, but would like to hear from people who tried both methods.
Jeff, you do speak in code. Like Apollo in Heraclitus fragment B5: The lord whose oracle is the one in Delphi neither says nor conceals but gives a sign.After 20 years with tuners, my thoughts. If you use the tuner to get a load when the load goes away from you it might well be.....away away. If you get a load with the tuner in what I refer to as neutral you can very quickly 95% of the time with s small adjustment on way or the other be back on small groups.
Many never understand. Fear not, your not alone.Jeff, you do speak in code. Like Apollo in Heraclitus fragment B5: The lord whose oracle is the one in Delphi neither says nor conceals but gives a sign.
I'm no expert, you can see that by my scores. BUT I do both, yep, both, I do a seating depth test and yes you can see the difference THEN and only then do I do a tuner test and again, yes, you can tell the difference.Which one of two methods: (a) tuner, (b) seating depth for tuning your rifle do you find easier, less time and material consuming and more consistent?
I am not a tuner guy, but would like to hear from people who tried both methods.
Changing the seat depth will alter the tune. So it does make sense to at least check on either side of the tune maybe one increment to see if it helps or hurts.So when you guys do the new seating test are you setting your tuners back to neutral or zero? That would make the most sense to me but it will also require more rounds
Let me rephrase this question by saying I’ve not had the opportunity to use a tuner so I guess that makes me a non tuner guy so that leads me to ask; What determines a neutral position ?So when you guys do the new seating test are you setting your tuners back to neutral or zero? That would make the most sense to me but it will also require more rounds
Jmho but, there's no "neutral position." You're either in tune or you're not.Let me rephrase this question by saying I’ve not had the opportunity to use a tuner so I guess that makes me a non tuner guy so that leads me to ask; What determines a neutral position ?
I have always started my seating depth tests with my tuner all the way to the back {as much as it will screw onto the barrel}So when you guys do the new seating test are you setting your tuners back to neutral or zero? That would make the most sense to me but it will also require more rounds
I have always started my seating depth tests with my tuner all the way to the back {as much as it will screw onto the barrel}
Once I have a seating depth load that is looking very good {I pick the one in the middle of the three best groups} then I start advancing my tuner to see the change and get the tightest group of the selected load/seating depth.
At that point I never chase the lands and depending on temperature or new batch of powder/projectiles only ever need the slightest turn in or out to bring things back tight.
That tune seems to last the life of the barrel for me…
I have seen folks changing tuner settings during matches up/down and get more and more frustrated as time and shots go on. A small tweak but never anything major will usually suffice for any adjustment you might feel necessary to suit conditions but it won’t need to be very much and usually it is better to leave things alone once you start a string.
In very simple and easy to understand terms, tuners allow us to change phase time, which lets us move the top or bottom of a single wave form(or a very few if you keep going), left or right to coincide with bullet exit. That's also why such small adjustments make so much difference. To alter the actual frequency enough to make the angular change that we see on target happen, it'd take huge adjustments or even adding weight to the tuner. So, in a nutshell, it's not frequency that we are altering, but phase.Ok so what is the tuner actually doing when it tunes/ retunes the load / rifle does it change the harmonics of the barrel, the exit timing? Would a tuner be more effective on a long slim barrel and less effective on a short stiff barrel? Yes I seen rifles go out of tune and with a tuner adjustment go back in tune so I’m not disputing if they work or not But knowing what they do could help not only the op of this thread but me and others