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jlow said:Isn’t this .002, 0.003, 0.004 neck tension purely theoretical?
I find that due to spring back and work hardening, what you actually get is always less and not particularly predictable. Have you guys actually measured neck diameter, neck thickness, and actually calculated ID?
Just as you said above, "how much tension or how high have you gone to achieve the results you were looking for". You stated more than .002" neck tension but what numbers are you talking about?Drop Port said:dkhunt14 said:I agree with TOM and Alex that tension is critical. Some guns are more critical then others. I also like to shoot the VLD's 10 to 15 in and I believe both of these help reduce vertical at 1000 yards. The more tension helps keep the bullet more consistent when going into the rifling. Plus the more tension helps if you have to open the bolt on a live round. Never had a bullet stay in the barrel. Matt
When you say more tension? I curious about what numbers you are talking, how much tension or how high have you gone to achieve the results you were looking for.
I was out load testing yesterday due to new dies and lot of powder. I found that my 6.5x47 definitely likes more than .002" neck tension. When I tried dropping down to .002 groups doubled. Loads area .002 off the lands.
jlow said:Jim, at least in my hands, modest difference in neck tension does not affect my seating depths although I have seen this at high neck tension and especially compressed loads. My seating depths usually varies by about a thousand. Agree doing things by the numbers, this is why I use the K&M seating force tool to measure my rounds.
I wish I could tell you how no turn necks shoots well….. It does not in my hands.
How uniformly you clean your neck inside also affect things. I can hold seating depth to .0005 and it lets me see differences. My K&M is in the drawer now that i have the hydro seater. Big pressure rings are a killer and a whole new ball game, you have .0005 spring back and when the pressure ring is .0005 larger than the shank what holds it?…………. jim
Hard necks will spring back more from last direction sizing(which can be either direction). But this as a change only affects seating force, not tension. Think about it, annealed necks provide less springback, so they spring back less from down-sizing, increasing seating force(due to increased interference). But tension itself is reduced with annealed necks.jlow said:The reason it can decrease neck tension is because if you size a neck with bushing, neck tension of the case reduce the actual decrease in neck diameter because the neck resist sizing and springs back to a larger external diameter and thus a larger internal diameter than what the bushing should theoretically give you.
No it isn't.jlow said:I think friction is also involved in the release of the bullet when the round is fired.
I'm not sure about this either. What you're describing is 'strength' or 'tensile strength' which represents an amount the metal can squeeze or stretch without yielding.jlow said:Spring back is ability of metal to resist change.