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.
gunamonth said:I'll have to disagree with what you were told. What one is trying to measure with a bearing surface comparator is.... bearing surface. That part of the bullet that comes in contact with the rifling.
The boat tail doesn't contact anything so, as Laurie pointed out, what you would really want is a land diameter opening in both parts of the Tubb tool. While it doesn't do exactly that, it's still helpful. Berger bullets are normally very consistent within a given lot, but from lot to lot the measured bearing surface can vary significantly. I recently bought a large quantity of their 105 BT's that measured 0.075" longer in bearing surface than the earlier lot (not a typo, seventy-five thousandths longer). With a 0.2 grain reduction in powder I still have pressure signs that didn't happen with the shorter ones.
As far as sorting Bergers by bearing surface from the same lot I decided it was a waste of time. Sierras are a very different story however.