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NECK BUSHING TEST 30BR

^^^^^^If you get the best tune with a particular neck tension, you may or may not see better results from changing the neck tension. Looking at the horizontal group, I would bet that is more due to the load being out of tune for that particular neck tension, or gun handling one.
 
^^^^^^If you get the best tune with a particular neck tension, you may or may not see better results from changing the neck tension. Looking at the horizontal group, I would bet that is more due to the load being out of tune for that particular neck tension, or gun handling one.
Absolutely thanks Bro, my point in my initial post.
 
@Bill Norris test made me want to test a 0.323” bushing. I had already tested 0.325 and 0.324 bushings, wth 0.324 being the best. Today I compared 0.324 and 0.323.

30-BR, 0.332 Neck, 17 twist Krieger, long range stock (15.2 lbm total weight).
ARC Nucleus action with a Trigger Tech Diamond trigger at ~ 10 oz.
Lapua 6BR brass skim turned to 0.012” max thickness.
Brass annealed after every firing, has been shot 12 times.
35.5 gr VV N130, 118 gr 7 ogive Bibs, CCI 450, seated 0.004” jamb, using a Wilson seater.
70 F, no mirage, 7 mph switching tail wind.

I shot four, 4-shot groups so I wouldn’t have to process my brass again before my next match. The 0.324” bushing is still the king for my rifle, long live the brass!
I'd double check your neck and chamber clearance dimensions.
.012x2=.024
Plus minimum of .308 bullet diameter=.332...or zero clearance.
 
@Bill Norris test made me want to test a 0.323” bushing. I had already tested 0.325 and 0.324 bushings, wth 0.324 being the best. Today I compared 0.324 and 0.323.

30-BR, 0.332 Neck, 17 twist Krieger, long range stock (15.2 lbm total weight).
ARC Nucleus action with a Trigger Tech Diamond trigger at ~ 10 oz.
Lapua 6BR brass skim turned to 0.012” max thickness.
Brass annealed after every firing, has been shot 12 times.
35.5 gr VV N130, 118 gr 7 ogive Bibs, CCI 450, seated 0.004” jamb, using a Wilson seater.
70 F, no mirage, 7 mph switching tail wind.

I shot four, 4-shot groups so I wouldn’t have to process my brass again before my next match. The 0.324” bushing is still the king for my rifle, long live the brass!
Why substrat .290" instead of .308" when calculating group size?
 
Bill, the next time you're testing, you may want to try this. Once I find something that shoots dots at 100, I load 15 rounds and shoot a group. This is a good indicator of not only how stable the load is but also how stable your 'zero' (center of the group) is.

For what it's worth... -Al

Re5ClUah.jpg
Why substrat .290" instead of .308" when calculating group size?
 

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