Shynloco
You can lead a horse to water, but ........
Folks,
I've not been reloading nearly as long as some of you and I've seen some very informative and knowledegable people express their opinions and experiences on this blog in an attempt to help others who seek ultimate accuracy from the rifles they reload for. And occasionally, I read conflicts between what I consider "expert opinions" from those who both practice what they preach and can back it up on the range in the scores they shoot. And in my pursuit of chasing that five shot one holer, I've read articles, comments and books by some of the premere Benchrest Competitors in their practice of "precision reloading." I think we can all agree, that there are certain casing preparation practices that are necessary in order to achieve what is call uniformity or "consistency" in every piece of brass we prep during reloading. By that I mean weighing, sorting and some believe in turning necks and annealing, while others (not necessarily competitors) chose not to turn necks and do not anneal. My guess is folks in either camp have tested their theory which leads them to why they do or don't do certain things. So bare with me because I found something (of concern) in my pursuit of perfection for preparing each piece of brass the same in order to attain uniform neck tension, something that most believe is critical to ultimate accuracy.
Not long ago, I started prepping new Lapua brass for my recent 6.5 X 55 rifle conversion. An issue arose where some brass did not meet the concentricity variance standard so I purchased a second group of brass, presumably being a different lot of Lapua brass (I didn't buy full boxes, hence the difference in lots). I did all the usual detailed preparation and then fireformed the brass. I separated the brass into groups where they weighed within 1 gr of one another. I then turned the necks on one group, but didn't turn the necks on the other. I loaded both these gropups with the same bullets, same depth seating and same powder loads. I then shot these groups and reloaded them twice more using the same criteria while developing the powder loads to find the best number of grs my baby liked the best for that bullet. After being able to get the five shot groups (100 yds) down to around the size of a quart, I took note of whether it made any difference in terms of accuracy, whether it matters that necks are turned or not, for my particular rifle. What was started buggin me some, was that though everything "seemed" to be identical case wise, I could "feel" a difference in neck tension when seating the bullet using my Wilson In-Line die which is how I seat my bullets in all the calibers I reload for. So what I found, was that turning all the necks made the neck tension uniform (except for a few casings that I'll anneal to see if they can be rehabilitated). But thats when I tripped across my "issue" that perplexes me some. And that occurred while I happened to be measuring the neck thickness of my groups AFTER having used the same Neck Turning tool with the identical same setting on all the piece of brass. What I found that there was a variance of .0004 - .0007 in neck thickness even after that Lapua brass had been turned with the identical same setting and tool and had been shot the same number of times.
SO why do I have that much of a variance in neck thickness, don't necessarily feel any significant difference in neck tension AND does that neck thickness variance mean anything in terms of accuracy? I invite any and all comments and opinions on this issue as I've become completely anal in my pursuit of perfection in my reloading. Thx to all for reading such a lengthy post.
Alex
I've not been reloading nearly as long as some of you and I've seen some very informative and knowledegable people express their opinions and experiences on this blog in an attempt to help others who seek ultimate accuracy from the rifles they reload for. And occasionally, I read conflicts between what I consider "expert opinions" from those who both practice what they preach and can back it up on the range in the scores they shoot. And in my pursuit of chasing that five shot one holer, I've read articles, comments and books by some of the premere Benchrest Competitors in their practice of "precision reloading." I think we can all agree, that there are certain casing preparation practices that are necessary in order to achieve what is call uniformity or "consistency" in every piece of brass we prep during reloading. By that I mean weighing, sorting and some believe in turning necks and annealing, while others (not necessarily competitors) chose not to turn necks and do not anneal. My guess is folks in either camp have tested their theory which leads them to why they do or don't do certain things. So bare with me because I found something (of concern) in my pursuit of perfection for preparing each piece of brass the same in order to attain uniform neck tension, something that most believe is critical to ultimate accuracy.
Not long ago, I started prepping new Lapua brass for my recent 6.5 X 55 rifle conversion. An issue arose where some brass did not meet the concentricity variance standard so I purchased a second group of brass, presumably being a different lot of Lapua brass (I didn't buy full boxes, hence the difference in lots). I did all the usual detailed preparation and then fireformed the brass. I separated the brass into groups where they weighed within 1 gr of one another. I then turned the necks on one group, but didn't turn the necks on the other. I loaded both these gropups with the same bullets, same depth seating and same powder loads. I then shot these groups and reloaded them twice more using the same criteria while developing the powder loads to find the best number of grs my baby liked the best for that bullet. After being able to get the five shot groups (100 yds) down to around the size of a quart, I took note of whether it made any difference in terms of accuracy, whether it matters that necks are turned or not, for my particular rifle. What was started buggin me some, was that though everything "seemed" to be identical case wise, I could "feel" a difference in neck tension when seating the bullet using my Wilson In-Line die which is how I seat my bullets in all the calibers I reload for. So what I found, was that turning all the necks made the neck tension uniform (except for a few casings that I'll anneal to see if they can be rehabilitated). But thats when I tripped across my "issue" that perplexes me some. And that occurred while I happened to be measuring the neck thickness of my groups AFTER having used the same Neck Turning tool with the identical same setting on all the piece of brass. What I found that there was a variance of .0004 - .0007 in neck thickness even after that Lapua brass had been turned with the identical same setting and tool and had been shot the same number of times.
SO why do I have that much of a variance in neck thickness, don't necessarily feel any significant difference in neck tension AND does that neck thickness variance mean anything in terms of accuracy? I invite any and all comments and opinions on this issue as I've become completely anal in my pursuit of perfection in my reloading. Thx to all for reading such a lengthy post.
Alex