i have been loading some lapua and LC brass for my 223 weighting around 94grs, i have a few once fired PMC brass that weighs 104grs, i dropped my charge 1/2 gr on the powder, any thoughts.
chet
Brass is a combination of copper and zinc, thus your statement “some brass alloy Mixed with Zinc” is both redundant and sloppy. Your initial assertion is correct and does not require citing any “study” to prove it. One can easily satisfy himself of that in a few minutes. Your notion of what you are doing when evaluating case volume and “the effect on hot gasses” is difficult to grasp. Can you expand on this ?Case capacity and case weight are not directly related, I have at least one study available that proves it. Brass used to make cartridges can vary in density due to it's content. Cartridge brass is not all brass nor do all brands use the same kind of brass alloy. Cartridge brass is made up of some brass alloy mixed with zinc, iron, silicon, and some brands even add chromium. The various combinations of that content will change the density and weight of cases even if the cases have the same volume.
Yes, if you are a bench rest competitor then I can understand you wanting to match cases as closely as possible but even then the case volume should be checked rather than just weighing the cases.
Using distilled water is the best way to verify case volume, not by pouring powder in to the case. Powder will not fill the cases properly because there are air spaces around the powder granules, it wont reflect the true case volume. When you are evaluating case volume you are doing it to estimate the effect on the hot gasses that the burning powder produces and water simulates how those gasses will fill the case better than anything else that is available to the average reloader.
Case capacity and case weight are not directly related, I have at least one study available that proves it.
There is at least one post on this site that reported different results.
I used to have a bookmark to the post but when the site was redesigned a couple of yrs ago it broke the link and I can't tell where it is now. From what I recall that test showed was a 70% correlation between variation in case capacity and brass weight for 223 brass. Now I believe that was done with LC brass and not various brands.
I'd like to hear from the 1000 yard Benchrest guys who have shot some good groups about how & if they address this subject. And explain any logic for the method they may use.
mikecr Sir, - You've stated in your post,
I sort by fully fire formed H20 capacities, and really couldn't care less about case weight. - How exactly are you controlling the water level to "over-flow" point - and are you trimming all your cases to the same length ? - I've tried this method of filling cases to the "over-flow" point and weighed the water. - Then repeated it over again (several times) with the exact same piece of brass and I definitely found variations in this process which indicates to me that its not precise enough to where I feel it establishes a valid capacity.
I'm sure in some situations, sorting by case weight is NOT better than nothing, but worse. - How could it be worse ? - A bunch of cases from the same lot are just that, nothing more, nothing less - If one chooses to just use them and forgo the "case capacity" step, the cases are going to get shot one way or another sooner or later and the only way to know how good they do is to try them.
While you don't understand the actual deviation, you don't know if it's good or bad overall. - You've totally lost me on this statement.
- And if it's directed at myself or someone else, whom ever the "you" is, then I can only say that this is an ambiguous statement. (because whom ever "you" is, is not known by yourself in regards to really anything at all)
- I'm not here to rock-the-boat, but I know what results I've achieved after using sort-by-weight as a method. (The Target down range and the Lab Radar chronograph are what I'm using as a "standard" for results)- I have to put trust somewhere in the process that I've chosen and the chronograph and the target are the 2 items that I've picked to determine the validity of the method that I sort by.
- Ron -
Very spot on ron.
Lots of vendors that cater to the ppc crowd sell cases sorted by weight. Ive never seen any selling them sorted by h2o capacity. People just take for granted that the heading process held a good tolerance during a single lot run and the extractor groove cutting tool didnt break or get replaced. So therefore most go with the fact that if theyre the same on the outside and they dont weigh the same the capacity is going to be different whether its a thicker base or thicker wall.
Ron,
'how to accurately measure H20 capacity' should be another thread, or thread search: http://forum.accurateshooter.com/se...o+accurately+measure+H20+capacity&o=relevance
How could sorting by weight be worse than not sorting at all? Because of the sorting part, which is acting on weak basis. If you need to separate and use best capacity match of 50 cases, you don't really get there, that you know of, using shortcuts and assumptions. You get there through planning, preps, direct measurements, and understanding.
So you might cull 5 cases deviating in weight, while leaving 3 cases in the remaining 45 that still deviate in capacity. You lost 2 extra cases gaining nothing over doing nothing.
On the other hand, if you simply cull the 3 deviating by capacity, you'd be down to 47 cases -while meeting your objective.
While you don't understand the actual deviation was not towards you personally. This could be WE, or I. And the context of this is that there is no real gain without understanding.
If we ask someone what to do and follow a direction given, regardless of apparent result, we gain nothing real until understanding it. If we try something and it seems to work, it hasn't really until we understand what is working. That is, we've isolated/tested something in particular to understand, and drawn a conclusion on this valid attribute.
Otherwise we're left with generalizations, rules of thumb, loose notions, common fallacies, and hearsay. Much, of little actual value.