garandman
Bolt Gun Bodacious
Let's wax a bit philosophical about cause and effect in the firearms world. And its usefulness to predict outcomes for oursevles and others.
We all test loads, and bullet weights, and primer type / seating depth, and neck tension, and annealing and sorting brass and a dozen other factors.
The possibility for a false positive, or assigning an effect / outcome to a particular cause seems real. For instance, (and only as single example) we might test primer seating depth on our best load, and come to a conclusion that seating depth does / does not matter. How many times do we need to repeat that test? Should it be on different days / various different conditions ( ambient temp / humidity / altitude / baro pressure, etc)
And what is the possibility that our results aren't due to some other cause than we are testing - brass stress / failure, or an unkown bad wind read, hot / cold air pockets in the bullet path, some bad powder kernels, or just good old shooter error?
Then, what is the prediction value of what happenned in my gun being universally / conditionally / rarely true in other ppls guns? There a fair amount of dogmatism about our experience being of predictive value for other shooters in their guns in the firearms world.
How do you go about testing e.g. primer seating depth (or anything else) in your gun / reloads? How many times / varying atmosphereic conditions do you test in? What are your "falsification" methods? And what do you see as the predictive value for your test results in other guns / other shooters?
ETA: I'll answer for myself - I'll test my premise (e,g, CCI match primers are better than Federal match primers, JUST as an example) on three different days, in a variety of temps / humidities ) to see if I've *really* got something, rather than a false positive.
We all test loads, and bullet weights, and primer type / seating depth, and neck tension, and annealing and sorting brass and a dozen other factors.
The possibility for a false positive, or assigning an effect / outcome to a particular cause seems real. For instance, (and only as single example) we might test primer seating depth on our best load, and come to a conclusion that seating depth does / does not matter. How many times do we need to repeat that test? Should it be on different days / various different conditions ( ambient temp / humidity / altitude / baro pressure, etc)
And what is the possibility that our results aren't due to some other cause than we are testing - brass stress / failure, or an unkown bad wind read, hot / cold air pockets in the bullet path, some bad powder kernels, or just good old shooter error?
Then, what is the prediction value of what happenned in my gun being universally / conditionally / rarely true in other ppls guns? There a fair amount of dogmatism about our experience being of predictive value for other shooters in their guns in the firearms world.
How do you go about testing e.g. primer seating depth (or anything else) in your gun / reloads? How many times / varying atmosphereic conditions do you test in? What are your "falsification" methods? And what do you see as the predictive value for your test results in other guns / other shooters?
ETA: I'll answer for myself - I'll test my premise (e,g, CCI match primers are better than Federal match primers, JUST as an example) on three different days, in a variety of temps / humidities ) to see if I've *really* got something, rather than a false positive.
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