no, never, unless you are loading for elephants inside 10 yds. daveIs it ok to mix bullet lots if you are separating by weight and bbto??? Or is there another reason not to mix lots. Just curious.
I hope it's multiple choice, that way I stand a chanceI smell a test!
Not to change topics. I know that measuring bbto matters and totally understand why. But many say on here that weighing bullet does not. I’m trying to understand that. If one bullet was heavier than another, at long range, would it not in theory impact lower? Somebody straighten me out please
You will save even more time and $ if you learn to tune with a barrel tuner.Shooters tend to measure things to the tightest tolerance they are able to, rather than the tolerance that meets their requirements. Today’s mass produced bullets hold a very tight weight tolerance. Just because can sort them into +\- .02 grain lots doesn’t mean that they weren’t plenty good right out of the box. A tenth of a grain is 0.05% of the total weight of a 180 grain bullet. It’s just so small even before you sort.
Getting good handloads is the process of repeatedly identifying the largest problem and fixing it until you are satisfied. Way too many shooters do it exactly backwards, obsessing over minutiae while half-assing important things like properly tuning a load. Your fx-120i is a waste of money if your rifle is even a little out of tune. Learn to tune with the basics before messing with advanced practices. It will save a lot of time and effort.
Are those averages or just one bullet from each lot?Here is the measurements of a couple different lots of same part number 168 grain Match .308 Hornady bullets. Measured from both ends using a Hornady comparator.
No truer words have been spoken. I was late to the tuner party, but I’m a full fledged believer now that I’ve taken the plunge.You will save even more time and $ if you learn to tune with a barrel tuner.
Ben