spclark said:Not sure it matters much though; scores with once-turned haven't changed & brass seems to last just as long. Maybe for BR it's worth it but for score (sling) shooting it just might be a waste of time.
jonbearman said:He didnt mean it that way.Reread it.
Greyfox said:Do I misunderstand or are you saying that score shooting is somehow not "benchrest" and is less demanding than group shooting?
Greyfox said:I offer my apologies. Please forgive my misunderstanding. More than once I have been in the company of some who seem to think their chosen discipline is somehow superior to everybody else's. I'm glad this wasn't the case here.
Good shooting to you.
searcher said:... I routinely re-turn my necks every 8 or so firings - as I will usually do around 25 loadings on a set before retiring them. That will give me two tune-ups after the initial turning. On these "tune-up" turnings, very little material will come off. While not much, the brass flows forward even when headspace is right-on perfect. When flowing forward, it does not flow forward uniformly - thus the "tune-up". Some may believe it is not needed. It probably isn't to shoot well. Because I want no known inconsistences in my brass - I do it because I know the incontistencies are there - however minor. Personally, I think it is worth it. After every firing - no way. Don't even know anyone who does.
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