So far, I’ve just loaded to my desired CBTO...
now did you have to adjust your seating die for each bullet to get your desired CBTO?
Yessir... sometimes as much as.008”.... usually just 1or 2thou
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So far, I’ve just loaded to my desired CBTO...
now did you have to adjust your seating die for each bullet to get your desired CBTO?
Yessir... sometimes as much as.008”.... usually just 1or 2thou
snip...So far, I’ve just loaded to my desired CBTO... knowing that some bullets may be pushed down further into the case than others, though.... right?? Makes me doubt my technique (and ability) that’s for sure!
Within reason, having small differences in the amount of bullet shank seated down in the neck are of far less concern to me than where the ogive is located relative to the lands. Think about how far you can change bullet seating depth (which changes effective case volume by changing how far the shank is seated down in the neck) without measurably affecting velocity. It's likely a much larger number than your bullet BTO length variance. So you're doing the right thing IMO by keeping CBTO constant. As far as having to reset your seating die mic, bullet sorting should go a long way toward solving that issue. I think you've got it, but perhaps the cartoon below might help you visualize the critical bullet contact and measurement points.
by my calculations moving a .30 cal bullet down a full .1 in seating depth decreases case volume by 4.6 ml , a .264 would be 3.6 ml, and a .243 only 3.1 ml so the difference of a couple of thousandths would make is pretty small in the big scheme
great drawing btw