Can I gain accuracy by crimping the case neck, commonly found in factory ammo?
The theory would be that crimping adds consistency to the neck tension.
The theory would be that crimping adds consistency to the neck tension.
mac86951 said:Interior Ballistics would suggest that a crimped round would have a higher 'pressure to start' This might allow for a change in velocity as well.
jonbearman said:If you are truly trying to reload for accuracy , then crimping will do nothing but deforming the bullet you wish to be consistent. You can figure out what your neck tension you have by measuring , then measure your bullets pressure ring if it has one or the bearing surface. Then measure the inside of the neck and subtract the neck diameter from the bullet and you should end up with .003 to .004 thou neck tension which is more than adequate.
Measure the neck ID for clarity. What cartridge and gun are we talking about?
amlevin said:mac86951 said:Interior Ballistics would suggest that a crimped round would have a higher 'pressure to start' This might allow for a change in velocity as well.
Richard Lee covered this in his "2nd Edition" showing that the crimped ammo he submitted for testing showed increased pressure. The amount for the tested ammo was low, only a couple hundred psi.
For me, rather than crimping and damaging the bullet, I'd rather just use a larger bushing and increase neck tension.
Other than removing any flare in a straight walled case, pushing the case mouth back against the bullet, I don't crimp. Even with a cannelure on my "AR food" I don't crimp.
This is another one of those questions that will never produce unanimity in the answers.
mac86951 said:I won't crimp any bullet that does not have a cannelure.
Cheap AR food, fun plinking and no worries. Accurate? uhm, not by my definition.
500Stroker said:Can I gain accuracy by crimping the case neck, commonly found in factory ammo?
The theory would be that crimping adds consistency to the neck tension.