jelenko
Gold $$ Contributor
There actually is a saying 'It's not what you say, it's how you say it"It's not what I say, it's how
I first heard it in the 1960's.
There actually is a saying 'It's not what you say, it's how you say it"It's not what I say, it's how
Ok Danny, I've got to tell you, you got me in trouble with my wife on this one. I read it to her and she hollered HIND LEGS is she a DOG. ha ha She chewed us both out. HBSomewhere, as this topic is being discussed, there is probably some 13 year old girl shooting highpower rifle, standing on her hind legs, putting them all in the 10 and X ring with a borrowed rifle, ammunition and equipment, with no clue about what all of this is about.
Danny
I see your rationale but IMO it is flawed. I use a case sized like I fire it... .003” ‘bump’ at the appropriate shoulder datum. My rifle must be a honey badger ‘cause it don’t give a $hi+’.rardoin
Sorry I didn't get back sooner on why your case should have zero case headspace when using the CBTO method for finding the lands method . Let's say you size the case with .002 headspace , when your seating the bullet long to get the feel from bolt face to ogive , that little .002 wiggle room could through off the measurement . If the case is sized with a.002 from CBTD which I do , when rired it will jam the bullet .002 into the rifling . I use a .002 headspace and a .002 CBTO measurement , so when fired my bullet just touched the lands . Works well for me, no hard chambering and no bullets jammed in rifling . Mid range load with IMR4064 under a Sierra 168gr MK , groups 1/2" at 200 yards.
Please recall the title of the post ends in “...what do you think?” I give honest feedback not adulation.Some of you are pretty thin skinned. It's not what I say, it's how I say it that offend you. lol
Some of you are pretty thin skinned. It's not what I say, it's how I say it that offend you. lol
Yes, Erik was making fun of 'neck sizers'. I disagree that he is chasing the lands. For example suppose that after 600rds loading at the same CBTO a rifle's precision falls off. Erik's method is to explore a new seating depth with a couple of longer CBTO's. Is that moving the bullet toward the lands to compensate for throat changes? Absolutely! But consider that if you measured the new touch distance you find it has changed 0.012" longer but seating the bullet 0.003" further out brings groups right back to where they were originally. Are you chasing the lands or chasing an accurate seating depth? This is the point Erik is making. A subtle difference but a difference none the less. If, in the above scenario, one loaded back to the same distance off the lands he may have missed the depth that the load would shoot best at blinded by the need to seat at a prescribed distance off the lands.I think he’s chasing the lands, just in a different way. Had a consistency issue using my Hornady OAL tool, with 140g Nosler in 6.5CM. I used the dummy round method with great results. I still knew where the bullet jams and I saved that dummy round for reference. I noticed that Mr FL Bump size is wearing a T shirt with “I neck size”. Is he making fun of the group spread, depicted on the shirt?
A bit of Banter coupled with useless Blatherread the first page and the last page, doubt i missed anything worth while in the middle
Yes, Erik was making fun of 'neck sizers'. I disagree that he is chasing the lands. For example suppose that after 600rds loading at the same CBTO a rifle's precision falls off. Erik's method is to explore a new seating depth with a couple of longer CBTO's. Is that moving the bullet toward the lands to compensate for throat changes? Absolutely! But consider that if you measured the new touch distance you find it has changed 0.012" longer but seating the bullet 0.003" further out brings groups right back to where they were originally. Are you chasing the lands or chasing an accurate seating depth? This is the point Erik is making. A subtle difference but a difference none the less. If, in the above scenario, one loaded back to the same distance off the lands he may have missed the depth that the load would shoot best at blinded by the need to seat at a prescribed distance off the lands.