Tim Singleton
Gold $$ Contributor
I've commented on a couple posts recently about load development and have talked about how important it is to find the best seating depth for the bullet and barrel you are using.
This is not a method I came up with and struggled myself until I bought Tony Boyers book and learned this method. So I think it is worth sharing and talking about as much load development questions as come up regularly.
I chose the attached target not because they are good groups. Actually the opposite this barrel is just an average performer. So it is really clear as it comes into the seating depth it likes for this bullet.
On the same piece of heavy paper. I use old Manila file folders. Make a graph with 3 charge weights across the top from light to medium to upper end.
After finding the jam length for this bullet by loading longer and longer until the bullet is pushed back in the case. Check this several times measuring base to ogive of the dummy round. After this is determined go down the page with 4 different seating depths going from .005 off jam in .003 increments. In some cases you can move in .005 increments depending on the bullet type. Some bullets like the 6mm -105 and 107 like to be further out
Fire three shot groups at each powder weight and seating depth. 9x out of 10 the seating depth can be found in less than 50 shots. Then confirm with 5 shot groups
It's hard to believe a barrel could shoot that well at .009 off and scatter out at .012 off only .003 difference. I chose .009 off for the seating depth for this barrel and bullet
You are looking for a depth that shoots well from the light to upper powder charge weight
This is not a method I came up with and struggled myself until I bought Tony Boyers book and learned this method. So I think it is worth sharing and talking about as much load development questions as come up regularly.
I chose the attached target not because they are good groups. Actually the opposite this barrel is just an average performer. So it is really clear as it comes into the seating depth it likes for this bullet.
On the same piece of heavy paper. I use old Manila file folders. Make a graph with 3 charge weights across the top from light to medium to upper end.
After finding the jam length for this bullet by loading longer and longer until the bullet is pushed back in the case. Check this several times measuring base to ogive of the dummy round. After this is determined go down the page with 4 different seating depths going from .005 off jam in .003 increments. In some cases you can move in .005 increments depending on the bullet type. Some bullets like the 6mm -105 and 107 like to be further out
Fire three shot groups at each powder weight and seating depth. 9x out of 10 the seating depth can be found in less than 50 shots. Then confirm with 5 shot groups
It's hard to believe a barrel could shoot that well at .009 off and scatter out at .012 off only .003 difference. I chose .009 off for the seating depth for this barrel and bullet
You are looking for a depth that shoots well from the light to upper powder charge weight