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Base to ogive. .002 variation or less works for me.For those of you sorting bullets, which measurement is more important-base to ogive or base to point? How much variation do you allow within a group when sorting?
Since for me it's important to get consistent seating depth (how far the base of the bullet is into the case effecting case volume/capacity, as well as blowby), I sort bullets by BTO. . . but I use a comparator insert that matches the contact point of the seating stem I use. I sort in groups +/- .001.For those of you sorting bullets, which measurement is more important-base to ogive or base to point? How much variation do you allow within a group when sorting?
Even custom bullets can vary as much as .010 in oal, so for long range I sort them into groups of .002 max variance.For those of you sorting bullets, which measurement is more important-base to ogive or base to point? How much variation do you allow within a group when sorting?
Overall length and sort into .002” groups.For those of you sorting bullets, which measurement is more important-base to ogive or base to point? How much variation do you allow within a group when sorting?
With the bullets I tend to use, sorting by base to ogive seems to kind of initially weight sort them too.I first sort the bullets by weight, then sort them after that, by base to ogive. I have had very good results doing it this way. For what it’s worth, I also sort primers by weight.
True words there.... I tend to stick to brands of bullets that don't have extreme weight differentials or one ends up with so many small "lots" of bullets, that one needs to sort 1,000 or so at a time to end up with reasonable counts in each lot. Some of the factory bullets are pretty bad - but some (like the Lapua Scenar L bullets) are pretty good in that respect. Same with the custom bullets - to some degree - and lots among them. I sort into lots by weight, trying to not get more than three or four lots - then measure base to ogive to weed out the "weird" ones which, despite weight similarity - are still way off from where they should be based on weight alone.Even custom bullets can vary as much as .010 in oal, so for long range I sort them into groups of .002 max variance.
Sorting non custom bullets for long range use can be time consuming starting with base to seater stem into .002 groups followed by base to ogive at .002 and finally the best get sorted by OAL , a bit of work but free accuracy.
My preference is to buy the customs.
I feel that keeping a tight tolerance between seater contact point and ogive gives me confidence that when I adjust the seater the ogive to lands relationship moves the equal amount.True words there.... I tend to stick to brands of bullets that don't have extreme weight differentials or one ends up with so many small "lots" of bullets, that one needs to sort 1,000 or so at a time to end up with reasonable counts in each lot. Some of the factory bullets are pretty bad - but some (like the Lapua Scenar L bullets) are pretty good in that respect. Same with the custom bullets - to some degree - and lots among them. I sort into lots by weight, trying to not get more than three or four lots - then measure base to ogive to weed out the "weird" ones which, despite weight similarity - are still way off from where they should be based on weight alone.