Interesting thread and I've followed along..somewhat.
Gonna just toss out an analogy and see what others think, is all
Lets imagine the neck were ultra light and pliable, like a soft and very thin plastic with say, a silicone consistency vs brass. Another analogy..a feather...soft and light.
Now, if the bullet is seated below this theoretical feather light and soft neck, do will still believe it doesn't move before the far heavier bullet moves?
It's not a trick question and I'm in the crowd that thinks BOTH can happen at the same time, but does my analogy change anything regarding the physics? My thinking is that under 65,000psi, a .010 thick piece of brass case neck...is a feather. Am I wrong?
Also, I tend to think that jamming hard minimizes whatever effect neck tension has, in regard to when the bullet begins to move. If so, jumping is allowing pressure to BUILD higher before the bullet begins to engrave. Sorta a running start at the lands vs a standing start because more time is given for more powder to begin to produce gas.
Just spit balling here but curious what others say. FWIW, I have virtually always found a great load with some amount of jam. Not saying one way is better or worse, just different and one way MIGHT minimize the variables of neck tension and thickness better more than the other.
Gonna just toss out an analogy and see what others think, is all
Lets imagine the neck were ultra light and pliable, like a soft and very thin plastic with say, a silicone consistency vs brass. Another analogy..a feather...soft and light.
Now, if the bullet is seated below this theoretical feather light and soft neck, do will still believe it doesn't move before the far heavier bullet moves?
It's not a trick question and I'm in the crowd that thinks BOTH can happen at the same time, but does my analogy change anything regarding the physics? My thinking is that under 65,000psi, a .010 thick piece of brass case neck...is a feather. Am I wrong?
Also, I tend to think that jamming hard minimizes whatever effect neck tension has, in regard to when the bullet begins to move. If so, jumping is allowing pressure to BUILD higher before the bullet begins to engrave. Sorta a running start at the lands vs a standing start because more time is given for more powder to begin to produce gas.
Just spit balling here but curious what others say. FWIW, I have virtually always found a great load with some amount of jam. Not saying one way is better or worse, just different and one way MIGHT minimize the variables of neck tension and thickness better more than the other.