I was being forgetful and did not deburr or chamfer any of my loads (100 pieces). By the time I realized I was shaving copper off the jacket I had already dumped powder in each case. I was being lazy and figured it probably wont make a difference. After seating 50 bullets I decided too much copper was being removed and inside neck chamfered the other 50 loaded cases.
10 each of 32.2, 32.4, 32.6, 32.8 and 33 grains of Varget in 6 Dasher were seated without inside neck chamfer. The other 50 (31.2 to 32) had been chamfered, I figured getting some brass shavings in the case was still better then shaving pieces of the jacket off. The bullets seated a lot easier. Also the groups for the 31.2 to 32 grain loads were much better than the 32.2 to 33 loads.
Possible reasons:
1. Shooter fatigue.
2. Wind started going nuts (I can't read wind well but this didn't seem like the case).
3. The rifle just doesn't like 32.2 to 33 (I find this unlikely as most of the posts I gathered info from had the chosen load in this range).
4. Chamfering the inside case neck. This is the most likely reason in my eyes because the good groups line up perfectly with the chamfered cases.
I normally don't forget to do this step so I have never seen the effects of it.
So, has anyone done any testing to see just how badly groups can get with little pieces of the copper jacket shaved off? If so, was it like 10% worse or 150% worse?
Or is it one of those things people are told to do and have never tried shooting groups without doing it.
Here is the info from the trip: https://imgur.com/a/mAxqOE8 . I did some ladder tests at 300 and 600 yards but seeing as how the 32.2 to 33 grain loads were erratic, the info is not valid for those. (I know you guys hate it when people do load dev without wind flags but you can't go down range at this place so that is never going to happen. They do have wind flags high up at the 200, 300 and 600 yard line, I am not sure if that is sufficient).
10 each of 32.2, 32.4, 32.6, 32.8 and 33 grains of Varget in 6 Dasher were seated without inside neck chamfer. The other 50 (31.2 to 32) had been chamfered, I figured getting some brass shavings in the case was still better then shaving pieces of the jacket off. The bullets seated a lot easier. Also the groups for the 31.2 to 32 grain loads were much better than the 32.2 to 33 loads.
Possible reasons:
1. Shooter fatigue.
2. Wind started going nuts (I can't read wind well but this didn't seem like the case).
3. The rifle just doesn't like 32.2 to 33 (I find this unlikely as most of the posts I gathered info from had the chosen load in this range).
4. Chamfering the inside case neck. This is the most likely reason in my eyes because the good groups line up perfectly with the chamfered cases.
I normally don't forget to do this step so I have never seen the effects of it.
So, has anyone done any testing to see just how badly groups can get with little pieces of the copper jacket shaved off? If so, was it like 10% worse or 150% worse?
Or is it one of those things people are told to do and have never tried shooting groups without doing it.
Here is the info from the trip: https://imgur.com/a/mAxqOE8 . I did some ladder tests at 300 and 600 yards but seeing as how the 32.2 to 33 grain loads were erratic, the info is not valid for those. (I know you guys hate it when people do load dev without wind flags but you can't go down range at this place so that is never going to happen. They do have wind flags high up at the 200, 300 and 600 yard line, I am not sure if that is sufficient).