Wanted to see if my now 1x fired Lapua 223 brass weight correlates to volume. I purchased 400 cases from the same batch and weight sorted them. The cases from this study are from the lighter half of the batch which range from 94.3 to 95.0 grains. The heavier half range from 95.1 to 96.4 grains and were not part of this study.
Cases were deprimed, cleaned with SS media, FLR, shoulders bumped back 0.003â€, neck sized with a LCD, and lube removed. No trimming was necessary. The cases were weight sorted and binned in 0.1 grain increments and one case was taken from each bin for a total of 17 cases.
For volume measurement, cases were first weight empty, plugged with the 21st Century tool, the Gempro 250 was tarred with the case/plug combo and then partially filled with rubbing alcohol. The cases were then filled until the meniscus was flat with rubbing alcohol using a syringe/needle and the added weight noted.
At the start of the study, a single case (94.34 grain) was primed with a Wolf SRM primer and its volume determined as described above – three volume measurements were done – the liquid weights were 26.78/26.74/26.78 grains. The case was then deprimed and residue alcohol blown out with compress air. The weight of the case was then check to make sure that it had not changed (i.e. by residue alcohol). The case was then plugged with the 21st Century primer tool, the case was placed on the balanced and tared. Case volume was again measured using the above method 3 times. Liquid weights were 26.80/26.78/26.80 grains.
So a number of conclusions. One is the 21st Century tool was an excellent replacement for the primer giving statistically equivalent case volume weights. I had slight problem with this tool at first with unfired Lapua brass as its primer pocket was a bit tight but this was not a problem with fired cases. My only regret is not buying 2 instead of one, that way I could transfer the alcohol from one case directly to another without pouring it back into the bottle.
The attach graph showed that despite the slight difference in the weight of the cases used in this study i.e. 0.7 grains, one can clearly see the correlation between case weight and the weight of the liquid it held and therefore case volume. Correlation coefficient was 0.57 (0 means no correlation and 1 is perfect correlation).
Cases were deprimed, cleaned with SS media, FLR, shoulders bumped back 0.003â€, neck sized with a LCD, and lube removed. No trimming was necessary. The cases were weight sorted and binned in 0.1 grain increments and one case was taken from each bin for a total of 17 cases.
For volume measurement, cases were first weight empty, plugged with the 21st Century tool, the Gempro 250 was tarred with the case/plug combo and then partially filled with rubbing alcohol. The cases were then filled until the meniscus was flat with rubbing alcohol using a syringe/needle and the added weight noted.
At the start of the study, a single case (94.34 grain) was primed with a Wolf SRM primer and its volume determined as described above – three volume measurements were done – the liquid weights were 26.78/26.74/26.78 grains. The case was then deprimed and residue alcohol blown out with compress air. The weight of the case was then check to make sure that it had not changed (i.e. by residue alcohol). The case was then plugged with the 21st Century primer tool, the case was placed on the balanced and tared. Case volume was again measured using the above method 3 times. Liquid weights were 26.80/26.78/26.80 grains.
So a number of conclusions. One is the 21st Century tool was an excellent replacement for the primer giving statistically equivalent case volume weights. I had slight problem with this tool at first with unfired Lapua brass as its primer pocket was a bit tight but this was not a problem with fired cases. My only regret is not buying 2 instead of one, that way I could transfer the alcohol from one case directly to another without pouring it back into the bottle.
The attach graph showed that despite the slight difference in the weight of the cases used in this study i.e. 0.7 grains, one can clearly see the correlation between case weight and the weight of the liquid it held and therefore case volume. Correlation coefficient was 0.57 (0 means no correlation and 1 is perfect correlation).