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Chasing the lands is stupid... What do you think?

It all makes quite a bit of sense to me. This takes a lot of work out of the process. I have a 223 that shoots Fed. 77 GMM at around 1/2", and that is loaded to mag length.
 
https://bisonballistics.com/articles/optimal-group-size-for-rifles

"In no situation should you ever use 3-shot groups to get an indication of accuracy. It's just not an efficient way to spend your money or your time."

Yeah, but, in most of these methods used for evaluating loads, we aren't just using 3 shots. As Erik points out, he's looking for consistency across at least 2-3 groups. That's 6-9 shots.

I'm sure there would be nothing lost by increasing to 5/10/20 shot groups, other than time/components/barrel life, but why do it if it isn't necessary?
 
Like the distance to the lands many significant factors are changing over time, many which we do not choose to or are not able to measure. The target should be the primary measurement which dictates something should be done, and of course a major shift in a critical measured parameter can prompt concern. I don't chase the lands but if I happen to check at the end of the comp season and find significant erosion, even if the target is ok I will do a small evaluation +/- charge and seating depth, just to be sure I'm optimized for everything which is changing. Only a few shots needed and it's still practice. On this topic we are dealing with RELATIVE measurements using a COMPARATOR, so the concepts of accuracy and precision are vague.

And neck sizing gives more accurate and consistent head space in my 223 bolt guns! Not so in any others; universal principles are difficult to come by
 
https://bisonballistics.com/articles/optimal-group-size-for-rifles

"In no situation should you ever use 3-shot groups to get an indication of accuracy. It's just not an efficient way to spend your money or your time."

I shouldn't have worded that so strongly, as it has a specific context - that the groups being discussed in that article are *independent* groups - a simple test to decide if one group is better than another. In most (smart) load development, there is a trend that we can follow (accuracy changing with seating depth or charge weight) that contains information that is useful. That extra information can make multiple 3 shot groups more useful.

They're still inefficient relative to 5 shot groups, but sometimes it's helpful to trade off efficiency for simply getting more groups to look at. Sometimes being able to see a trend of 5 three shot groups is more useful than the extra confidence gained by shooting 3 5-shot groups.
 
My experience is that the very best loads are relatively insensitive to small variations in seating depth and are also insensitive to different lots of components. A new lot of bullets can always change the distance between where the seating stem makes contact and where the ogive touches the lands. The distance from where the seating stem contacts and the point can also change, which changes OAL.

If you are pulling your hair out over these measurements, I don't really think you're in a "sweet spot."
 
The way i see this, is that you are not "chasing the lands".. more so, you are "chasing a window" of optimum accuracy for that barrel.
I don’t want to speak for another man but that’s what I heard him say so as long as it shoots small - who cares where the lands are
stay .001 back from the inside of the seating window until it doesn’t shoot small @Erik Cortina
Correct me if I’m wrong
 
How do I chase something that I don’t measure? The point is, that lands and seating depth do not move in 1:1 relationship, so that’s why I don’t chase the lands. I simply make sure I stay in my node and don’t care where the lands are.
I think what Eric is trying to say is after finding the jam measurement he will not measure this again. He will only adjust his seating depth from the accuracy node measurement. He doesn't care how much the lands have worn.
Is this correct, Erik?
 
5 shot groups every .003 is more component money and throat erosion than this poor boy can afford. I’ll stick with my Berger Hybids. I’m sure there node is bigger than .003. Besides I like Jump. Didn’t Van Halen/David Lee Roth have a song about it. Mike.
 
I shouldn't have worded that so strongly, as it has a specific context - that the groups being discussed in that article are *independent* groups - a simple test to decide if one group is better than another. In most (smart) load development, there is a trend that we can follow (accuracy changing with seating depth or charge weight) that contains information that is useful. That extra information can make multiple 3 shot groups more useful.

They're still inefficient relative to 5 shot groups, but sometimes it's helpful to trade off efficiency for simply getting more groups to look at. Sometimes being able to see a trend of 5 three shot groups is more useful than the extra confidence gained by shooting 3 5-shot groups.

I will reiterate a point you made because it is highly misunderstood. If you want to compare item A to item B ( group dispersion, velocity, sd, etc) then a significant sample size may be required in order to achieve statistical significance. On the other hand establishing a significant trend vs multiple increments of an adjustment usually requires less data. For example how much does 0.2gr powder affect velocity? Simply loading several bullets with 0.2 different charge may require 10-20 each to achieve significance. On the other hand loading 1 or 2 each at something like +/-0.2, +/-0.5 will provide a highly significant and more useful result. And if you don't care about statistical significance you will end up chasing your tail.
 
https://bisonballistics.com/articles/optimal-group-size-for-rifles

"In no situation should you ever use 3-shot groups to get an indication of accuracy. It's just not an efficient way to spend your money or your time."
I disagree, with a qualification. Very well done rifles, shot off of the best rests, using flags well, on days where the wind is being kind, tend to be quite consistent. I have such a rifle. With it, I can do preliminary testing at 100 yards, for powder charge using what amounts to a sort of mini ladder test, noting how shots string out or cluster up as I advance through slight increases in charge weight, one shot per charge, on the same target, in the same wind condition for all shots. Once I have identified what I think will be a good charge weight that way (using a seating depth that has done well in the past) I shoot three and then five to verify, and if it checks out, start fiddling with seating depth. Doing things that way, loading at the range, I can sort out a load quite efficiently in an hour or so. I am always amazed at how difficult some seem to want to make this. Again, the rifle, rest, shooting technique, and conditions have to be right to use this approach.
 
I disagree, with a qualification. Very well done rifles, shot off of the best rests, using flags well, on days where the wind is being kind, tend to be quite consistent. I have such a rifle. With it, I can do preliminary testing at 100 yards, for powder charge using what amounts to a sort of mini ladder test, noting how shots string out or cluster up as I advance through slight increases in charge weight, one shot per charge, on the same target, in the same wind condition for all shots. Once I have identified what I think will be a good charge weight that way (using a seating depth that has done well in the past) I shoot three and then five to verify, and if it checks out, start fiddling with seating depth. Doing things that way, loading at the range, I can sort out a load quite efficiently in an hour or so. I am always amazed at how difficult some seem to want to make this. Again, the rifle, rest, shooting technique, and conditions have to be right to use this approach.

I don't disagree with you, but I will point out that the net conclusion of my article is that if you have 15 rounds to confirm a load, shoot 3 five shot groups, not 5 three shot groups. That's just about the entire point of the article, and perhaps I should have been more clear when writing it.

That said, when I'm doing initial load development, I start with 2-shot groups. The odds of having a good load shoot two very poor shots right out of the gates is so low, that it's very much worth saving the ammo to look elsewhere. If a gun that should shoot in the 2s prints the first two rounds in the 5s, you can go ahead and move on. This is not at odds with the article - the confidence that those two shots represent the load well is still very low. But the probability that a 2 shot group in the 5s will suddenly turn into a 5 shot group in the 2s is low indeed.
 
I disagree, with a qualification. Very well done rifles, shot off of the best rests, using flags well, on days where the wind is being kind, tend to be quite consistent. I have such a rifle. With it, I can do preliminary testing at 100 yards, for powder charge using what amounts to a sort of mini ladder test, noting how shots string out or cluster up as I advance through slight increases in charge weight, one shot per charge, on the same target, in the same wind condition for all shots. Once I have identified what I think will be a good charge weight that way (using a seating depth that has done well in the past) I shoot three and then five to verify, and if it checks out, start fiddling with seating depth. Doing things that way, loading at the range, I can sort out a load quite efficiently in an hour or so. I am always amazed at how difficult some seem to want to make this. Again, the rifle, rest, shooting technique, and conditions have to be right to use this approach.

Boyd you are saying the same thing Damon said and which I attempted to reiterate above. Looking at behavior across a wide range of some adjustment, such as charge weight, does not require much data for significance. For a ladder this is because the signal you impose (charge wt) greatly outweighs the variability of the response (poi). This is not the same as asking if 0.1 gr charge weight changes the poi of just loading up a few bullets with the 0.1 difference.
 
Looking at the video; seems to me one is still finding the optimum distance from the bullet to the lands, just using different semantics to describe the process.
 
If a bullet touching the lands centers the cartridge better, causes a more uniform pressure curve and eliminates the vibrations caused by a bullet slamming into the lands, all three of which lead to less vibrations, why would a more accurate load with a seating that is less than touching be anything other than an indication of a wrong primer or powder charge? What's the reason an off the lands load could be best?
 
I think what Eric is trying to say is after finding the jam measurement he will not measure this again. He will only adjust his seating depth from the accuracy node measurement. He doesn't care how much the lands have worn.
Is this correct, Erik?

Correct. I only find "jam" so that I stay away from it. If I am limited by mag length, then I don't care where jam is ever. All I worry about is where the rifle shoots.

For example: "Erik, where do you seat your bullets in relation to the lands?"
Me: "I don't know, however, I know my rifle shoots well at 2.150, 2.153, and 2.156, so I seat at 2.155"
 

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