This ^^^^^^Consistency.
Once you figure out what YOU like.
Write down YOUR process of madness and stick to it. Consistency everytime.
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This ^^^^^^Consistency.
Every step is important for safety and accuracy.With all the internets loading advice. What is the most important step and what order. Let start with virgin aftermarket brass first. I'll start another thread for once fired if need be. There are vids from top shooters and smiths on youtube that alot of us try to follow. Some great reads here as well. But I see where one shooter will not use steps other do or just in different orders. What's your holy grail of steps and sequence?
My thinking about the things that I can control is pretty much in line with what this graph depicts:With all the internets loading advice. What is the most important step and what order. Let start with virgin aftermarket brass first. I'll start another thread for once fired if need be. There are vids from top shooters and smiths on youtube that alot of us try to follow. Some great reads here as well. But I see where one shooter will not use steps other do or just in different orders. What's your holy grail of steps and sequence?
God I pull that move too regularlyPutting the Primer in the case before adding the powder.
First step is to buy a barrel chambered in a caliber that shoots well, is easy to reload, and has very high quality brass available.
I would suggest starting with 223 or 6br.
If you are buying Lapua brass, you can skip all brass steps. That's right, I said it. I do suggest a VLD inside reamer.
Get an arbor press seater press from the jump. You will discover all your mistakes very early by seating with a tiny arbor press.
Absofriggin' correct. A 100-10 answer.Neck tension and seating depth run a real tight race at my house.
Primer choice and powder charge are virtually irrelevant if the aforementioned are sorted out first.
So, most important step on virgin brass…. Pick a primer and luke warm charge. Start them out with .002 tension, run your depth test, increase tension as needed. You should be in the .1s and .2s by then.
This is going to be my only post in this thread, so I’ll address this before leaving.
A LOT of results seen on paper are a function of some other step…. So when you see a guy say this or that primer or powder made the gun come alive…. I think they would have found their first choice worked had they went through tension and depth.
So, again, for me it’s depth, tension, charge. I’ve picked a powder and bullet before the gun is ever assembled.
I'm going to add to my post and agree with Clancy. I turn my necks to get the right neck tension. Because I seat my bullets bearing surface right at the neck shoulder junction +. Where a donut could form, then FL size my brass to .003" tension then run them through a mandrel to get them to .002". Lapua brass is not perfect and if it's off .001" and you turn them from .014"+ to .012", it could make a difference to some.Neck tension and seating depth run a real tight race at my house.
Primer choice and powder charge are virtually irrelevant if the aforementioned are sorted out first.
So, most important step on virgin brass…. Pick a primer and luke warm charge. Start them out with .002 tension, run your depth test, increase tension as needed. You should be in the .1s and .2s by then.
This is going to be my only post in this thread, so I’ll address this before leaving.
A LOT of results seen on paper are a function of some other step…. So when you see a guy say this or that primer or powder made the gun come alive…. I think they would have found their first choice worked had they went through tension and depth.
So, again, for me it’s depth, tension, charge. I’ve picked a powder and bullet before the gun is ever assembled. a
^^^^^^^^^While loading processes are important, tune far out ways it. You can win matches with the most basic loading process if you nail the tune