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For best results what have you found to produce the best results. I weight sorted some 6mm bullets this evening and found interesting deviations from different manufactures.
This for a 6BRA and a 223AI
I am considering purchasing necessary equipment to sort by bearing length.
H
I used to sort by weight but since checking the bearing surface length i use that, first off variances and bearing surface length will affect friction And velocity if it has a longer bearing surface it also is heavier so you are sorting by weight as wellFor best results what have you found to produce the best results. I weight sorted some 6mm bullets this evening and found interesting deviations from different manufactures.
This for a 6BRA and a 223AI
I am considering purchasing necessary equipment to sort by bearing length.
H
Are your Hornady comparators hole sizes at bullet shank diameter, or are they not smaller?Two Hornady comparators one on the bottom one on the top of the bullet in my calipers
They are comparators whether or not the number is actually precise is irrelevant you’re comparing that bullet length to all the other bullet Lengths in your lot and separating them accordinglyAre your Hornady comparators hole sizes at bullet shank diameter, or are they not smaller?
If smaller, how do you get an accurate bearing surface length from between 2 compactors with smaller holes then the actual bullet shank diameters?
Straightshooter1
Thanks for sharing your test results. Based on your results, did the shot group of one bearing surface end up a little lower/higher than the other? Appears to in the photos.
A few years ago I tested some bullets (same lot) at 1000yds that had a variance of .014" in bearing surface. Point of impact between the two groups were about 12" apart in elevation.
Good Shooting
Rich
I agree that is what your outcome is.... but has no relevance to the actual length of the bearing surface, is my point.They are comparators whether or not the number is actually precise is irrelevant you’re comparing that bullet length to all the other bullet Lengths in your lot and separating them accordingly
What is your method?I agree that is what your outcome is.... but has no relevance to the actual length of the bearing surface, is my point.
Just that the length of the bearing surface falls in between your length measurement from a point on the BT to a point on the Ogive, and does not tell you if the actual bearing surface has variation in length, or if the variations come before and/or after the bearing surface itself.
For the must part, I have no method to measure the actual bearing surface lengths.What is your method?
Estimate or compare I don’t see the differenceFor the must part, I have no method to measure the actual bearing surface lengths.
However, I can estimate the length with a micro-scope or optical comparator.
Me neither....#23 hornady comparators one on the bottom one on the top of the bullet in my calipers.
I'm not looking to actually measure, I'm comparing so to group. Wanting to get the ones on the end out of the match grade.
I usually have 6 or 8 rows out of 100.
Straightshooter1
Thanks for sharing your test results. Based on your results, did the shot group of one bearing surface end up a little lower/higher than the other? Appears to in the photos.
A few years ago I tested some bullets (same lot) at 1000yds that had a variance of .014" in bearing surface. Point of impact between the two groups were about 12" apart in elevation.
Good Shooting
Rich
I used to sort by weight but since checking the bearing surface length i use that, first off variances and bearing surface length will affect friction And velocity if it has a longer bearing surface it also is heavier so you are sorting by weight as well