The available PPC brass (Lapua .220 Russian, Norma .22 or 6 PPC, which is what I'm using) has a small-diameter flashhole, .060"±. Presumably this flashhole size imparts a slight accuracy advantage over the larger flashhole. Correct?
The Lapua .222 Rem. Match brass that I've bought has the larger-diameter flashhole (.080"±). Note that this brass is labeled "Match." So my question: if the small flashhole is advantageous in small-caliber match and benchrest cartridges (at least the PPCs), why does the Lapua "Match" .222 Rem. brass have the large flashhole?
Is there some empirical evidence on the effect of flashhole diameter on accuracy?
The Lapua .222 Rem. Match brass that I've bought has the larger-diameter flashhole (.080"±). Note that this brass is labeled "Match." So my question: if the small flashhole is advantageous in small-caliber match and benchrest cartridges (at least the PPCs), why does the Lapua "Match" .222 Rem. brass have the large flashhole?
Is there some empirical evidence on the effect of flashhole diameter on accuracy?