Once a seating depth is established for a particular bullet should this work for other bullets with the same nose configuration
Most likely a good starting point. Uniformity of the "beginnings" of barell vibrations should be close to most similar oal's of different cases/bullets for a particular gun.Once a seating depth is established for a particular bullet should this work for other bullets with the same nose configuration or is it just maybe a good starting point to establish the new bullets seating depth?
NEVER assume !! Read the similar threads belowor is it just maybe a good starting point to establish the new bullets seating depth
Once a seating depth is established for a particular bullet should this work for other bullets with the same nose configuration or is it just maybe a good starting point to establish the new bullets seating depth?
I did read the threads below and did not see an answer for my question. I guess I will just take the new bullet and seat it out so that closing the bolt with no firing pin or ejector will tell me when I hit the rifling which will tell me to seat it deeper and try again..
It looks like the weather is getting better so I guess I should get some of this stuff done.
If your using the same point of aim .The first load development test I run is a test in .5 grain increments from a starting load to a maximum load watching for pressure signs. To load the cartridges for the test, you have to select a seating depth, and going to another successful load is where most people start. I shoot 5 rounds of each charge weight and one of those charge weights, groups better that the others. From That charge weight, I run a seating test at .080, .060, .040, .020, and .000 off the lands. Somewhere in those seating depths there will be better grouping. Now that you have a seating depth and charge weight that shows good grouping, I try to figure out how big that node is. Below is an example of a big node at .025 in seating depth.View attachment 1005805
The first load development test I run is a test in .5 grain increments from a starting load to a maximum load watching for pressure signs. To load the cartridges for the test, you have to select a seating depth, and going to another successful load is where most people start. I shoot 5 rounds of each charge weight and one of those charge weights, groups better that the others. From That charge weight, I run a seating test at .080, .060, .040, .020, and .000 off the lands. Somewhere in those seating depths there will be better grouping. Now that you have a seating depth and charge weight that shows good grouping, I try to figure out how big that node is. Below is an example of a big node at .025 in seating depth.View attachment 1005805
The first load development test I run is a test in .5 grain increments from a starting load to a maximum load watching for pressure signs. To load the cartridges for the test, you have to select a seating depth, and going to another successful load is where most people start. I shoot 5 rounds of each charge weight and one of those charge weights, groups better that the others. From That charge weight, I run a seating test at .080, .060, .040, .020, and .000 off the lands. Somewhere in those seating depths there will be better grouping. Now that you have a seating depth and charge weight that shows good grouping, I try to figure out how big that node is. Below is an example of a big node at .025 in seating depth.View attachment 1005805