I am very new to BR shooting and learning as I go so please be patient with me.
Does anyone check their brass for runout after it's fired? I have been having problems with the concentricity of my loaded rounds for my 30BR. The best I can get is about .002 and some are as bad as .005. I started checking my brass at every stage of the reloading process and after I fire them all of my brass come right out of the chamber with about .002 runout. I think this is the where my problem starts. Has anyone else experienced this and is there anything I can do to improve it?
The gun is a 30BR with a Batt action and Krieger barrel, .330 neck and 250 rounds down the pipe. Brass is Lapua turned by Hoehn to .0098 and fired three times. All measurements are taken on a Sinclair concentricity gauge.
Just to make sure that I was not the problem I checked the runout on fired brass out of my PPC and they roll almost perfect. Loaded PPC rounds are almost all less than .002.
Any ideas on where I should go from here would be very appreciated.
Does anyone check their brass for runout after it's fired? I have been having problems with the concentricity of my loaded rounds for my 30BR. The best I can get is about .002 and some are as bad as .005. I started checking my brass at every stage of the reloading process and after I fire them all of my brass come right out of the chamber with about .002 runout. I think this is the where my problem starts. Has anyone else experienced this and is there anything I can do to improve it?
The gun is a 30BR with a Batt action and Krieger barrel, .330 neck and 250 rounds down the pipe. Brass is Lapua turned by Hoehn to .0098 and fired three times. All measurements are taken on a Sinclair concentricity gauge.
Just to make sure that I was not the problem I checked the runout on fired brass out of my PPC and they roll almost perfect. Loaded PPC rounds are almost all less than .002.
Any ideas on where I should go from here would be very appreciated.