broncman, about spinning bullets in a collet. . . . .
One of Sierra Bullets' machinists (Ferris Pindell or Arvin Martin?) in 1971 made an end mill shaped to precicely match the ogive and body of those Lapua D46 bullets. They had previously looked at their shape with an optical comparitor and noticed four distintly different ogive shapes; probable evidence that four different pointing dies were used at Lapua to make those bullets. Only one shape lot was used for the test. That cherry made a cup in a collet with its shank sized to fit a Dremel Moto Tool. Then it was spun empty in the tool with an amp meter inline with the power cord to measure current. The collet was ground off a bit in a few places until the meter read the lowest consistant current. To them, that meant the collet was perfectly balanced as it spun at 30,000 rpm. When fired in the 1:11 twist barrel they would spin almost 170,000 rpm.
Bullets were put in the collet point down, spun up to speed and the current noted. The perfect ones with minimum current were put in the test box. Others drawing more current due to the centrifugal force loading the tool's bearing with more force required more current to spin it up to speed. Some flew out and those were probably going to shoot in the 9 ring at 600 yards in competition which sometimes happened using those bullets in matches. Sometimes 3 or 4 out of a box of 100 would do that.
Anyway, those perfect ones shot amazingly accurate. Which is a testament to the accuracy attained by pre-64 Win 70 based rifles and the Hart barrels fitted to them conventionally epoxy bedded in wood stocks. It also gave credibility to full length sizing .308 Win. cases for best accuracy in SAAMI spec chambers; lots of room around the front part of the case but they all centered perfectly up front in the chamber when fired.
One of Sierra Bullets' machinists (Ferris Pindell or Arvin Martin?) in 1971 made an end mill shaped to precicely match the ogive and body of those Lapua D46 bullets. They had previously looked at their shape with an optical comparitor and noticed four distintly different ogive shapes; probable evidence that four different pointing dies were used at Lapua to make those bullets. Only one shape lot was used for the test. That cherry made a cup in a collet with its shank sized to fit a Dremel Moto Tool. Then it was spun empty in the tool with an amp meter inline with the power cord to measure current. The collet was ground off a bit in a few places until the meter read the lowest consistant current. To them, that meant the collet was perfectly balanced as it spun at 30,000 rpm. When fired in the 1:11 twist barrel they would spin almost 170,000 rpm.
Bullets were put in the collet point down, spun up to speed and the current noted. The perfect ones with minimum current were put in the test box. Others drawing more current due to the centrifugal force loading the tool's bearing with more force required more current to spin it up to speed. Some flew out and those were probably going to shoot in the 9 ring at 600 yards in competition which sometimes happened using those bullets in matches. Sometimes 3 or 4 out of a box of 100 would do that.
Anyway, those perfect ones shot amazingly accurate. Which is a testament to the accuracy attained by pre-64 Win 70 based rifles and the Hart barrels fitted to them conventionally epoxy bedded in wood stocks. It also gave credibility to full length sizing .308 Win. cases for best accuracy in SAAMI spec chambers; lots of room around the front part of the case but they all centered perfectly up front in the chamber when fired.