Well said Dave. Most the time you just need to set your seating different to get them to shoot. MattEveryone needs to make bullets at some point in their life to understand all the nuances that go into the setup and production of bullets. Let's say Berger makes a run of 168's. That may be 200,000 or it may be 2,000,000 bullets. Tooling does not last forever. Die wear and much more frequently the BT punch for the point up die has to be replaced. There are +- tolerances on anything that's made. Every tooling change, every time the dies are setup for a production run is slightly different from the last lot. In particular the point up die is adjusted to guarantee ejection of the pointed bullet 100% of the time. It doesn't matter what the last lot measured.
Why's that? If the ogive form is the same, your seater is going to set them the same distance from the lands.Well said Dave. Most the time you just need to set your seating different to get them to shoot. Matt
Most the time the shorter ones are fatter. They don't seat the same to the lands of the gun. I shoot them in the lands and go by the marks on the bullet. MattWhy's that? If the ogive form is the same, your seater is going to set them the same distance from the lands.
Why's that? If the ogive form is the same, your seater is going to set them the same distance from the lands.
Everyone needs to make bullets at some point in their life to understand all the nuances that go into the setup and production of bullets.
Jammer you need to ease up and not drink all that Kool aide. Maybe you need to go see a bullet maker make some bullets. It is a very touchy thing. Even the first few bullets made by hand with custom dies need thrown out because they won't be the same. It is so technical that it is hard to make good bullets even with the best of stuff. Lube, temperature, cleaning of jackets, cleaning of cores and a bunch of other things come into play. It is pretty obvious you don't know much about bullets. If you saw the process you would realize they come out pretty good. MattThat may be, but it's not the variable that interests me.
I may not understand "...all the nuances that go into the setup and production of bullets." but I understand this: I give you money, you give me bullets that are what you say they are.
You don't understand my business. But I don't ask you to. I just ask that your check clears. If I can't deliver what I tell you can, when I tell you I can deliver it, I raise my price until I can.
Rather than make excuses, I suggest you start stating what you're really prepared to deliver, rather than trying to educate us on your business. I'd have a lot more respect for a manufacturer that stated his/her tolerances up front rather than making excuses for the range of measurements that his/her customers discovered after the fact.
Because I'm not particularly interested in being in your business.
If you saw the process you would realize they come out pretty good.
Sorry guys. We were off the week after Christmas and have been "digging" out ever sinceI recall that Berger claims to produce all bullets from one lot from a single die. However, when you change lots, then the bullets may be coming from a different die. And in addition the die must wear.