While I wouldn't say weighing primers was the single biggest thing that reduced my ES's, it sure can as I was surprised to find out how much that does help.Weighing primers
somebody had to say it
While I wouldn't say weighing primers was the single biggest thing that reduced my ES's, it sure can as I was surprised to find out how much that does help.Weighing primers
somebody had to say it
So what is your simple answer for the listIf matching lots means premium cases and bullets with any weird ones culled, then finding the primer/powder combo that dances together the best is my vote. I use Federal Match primers as the starting point and sweep the powder speed to see which one gives the lowest overall SD in pressure ladders with 5 shot steps.
Rambling on, my take on the 2 big dilemmas for reloaders are:
1. Trying for statistically significant sample sizes to quantify random variations introduces systemic variations. Barrel heating and fouling are examples of systemic issues.
2. The random variations are a soup of several things that may either largely cancel each other in a given group or stack up and ruin your day on the next. Which happened can not be determined with a single 5 shot group.
I try to find the next big chunk in the soup and accept that any one thing may not be a big step. I record the muzzle velocity of almost everything I shoot.
SD is not a function of ES. ES is always only 2 shots. My thoughts are ES is primarily reduced by culling the outliers. The flip side is a 5 shot group isn't large enough for the SD to be a reliable predictor of ES. From either end. It isn't large enough for a reliable SD and even a reliable SD won't predict the ES for a group that small. I shoot a lot of 10 shot strings and the ES seems to almost always be close to 3X the SD plus or minus 1 or 2. My take on that is I've been largely successful in knocking the tails off a true random distribution.
PowderSo what is your simple answer for the list
Gotta seat um at the exact crush also.Weighing primers
somebody had to say it
The rabbit hole is deep here but you didn't qualify what you wanted well enough. The answer to reducing either or both of those is not one single thing. It's the full package.Seen like a few has got this going down a rabbit hole.
I ask a simple question, if you can give a simple answer to my simple question thank you if you can’t please don’t derail
His question said nothing about the target. It was strictly about SD and ES.Everybody is missing the most important indicator, look at your results on targets…. That’s the most important indicator and what was done before everyone has gotten a chronograph (or could afford one anyway).
So what was the thing that made it look better on your target?Everybody is missing the most important indicator, look at your results on targets…. That’s the most important indicator and what was done before everyone has gotten a chronograph (or could afford one anyway).
Neither one matters if your target looks like a shot gun hit it.His question said nothing about the target. It was strictly about SD and ES.
Other here said just one thingThe rabbit hole is deep here but you didn't qualify what you wanted well enough. The answer to reducing either or both of those is not one single thing. It's the full package.
True, but again, he didn't ask about that.Neither one matters if your target looks like a shot gun hit it.
the right primer mainlyConsidering that all components are from matching lots, what Single thing in your reloading process have you found has had the biggest impact on lowering your ES or SD. I would like to compile a list of all the answers.
Thank you sir I will try to remind younote to self.....self DO NOT participate in any threads started by Bottom Feeder
Another vote for both neck tension and primers.
