I was pointing my 180gr Berger Hybrids recently and noticed that the pointing on the tips was not consistent. Some bullet tips were more pointed than others and had different meplat reductions. This had me confused as the bullets were batched in 2 thou groups measured by bearing surface using the Tubbs comparitor.
I mainly shoot f class/benchrest at 1000yds and thought that by sorting by bearing surface and then pointing would be the way to go. So there must be something causing this problem. It had to do with the fact that on the Whidden pointing die you place the base of the bullet on a flat surface, so the dimension from the base of the bullet to the ogive was different causing the bullet tip to be further in or out causing the difference to meplat diameters.
I then measured a batch of bearing surface measured bullets using the Stoney Point comparitor from base to ogive. I was surprised to find that in that measured batch there was a difference of 8 thou.
So, it seems that to achieve consistent pointing I should not measure by the bearing surface but by base to ogive to get consistent bullet pointing. This seems to go against what I heard from more experienced shooters who recommended to sort by bearing surface and then point, but if I do, then I could ruin that by having inconsistent pointing.
Any help from anyone who has had the same problem would be appreciated.
I mainly shoot f class/benchrest at 1000yds and thought that by sorting by bearing surface and then pointing would be the way to go. So there must be something causing this problem. It had to do with the fact that on the Whidden pointing die you place the base of the bullet on a flat surface, so the dimension from the base of the bullet to the ogive was different causing the bullet tip to be further in or out causing the difference to meplat diameters.
I then measured a batch of bearing surface measured bullets using the Stoney Point comparitor from base to ogive. I was surprised to find that in that measured batch there was a difference of 8 thou.
So, it seems that to achieve consistent pointing I should not measure by the bearing surface but by base to ogive to get consistent bullet pointing. This seems to go against what I heard from more experienced shooters who recommended to sort by bearing surface and then point, but if I do, then I could ruin that by having inconsistent pointing.
Any help from anyone who has had the same problem would be appreciated.