Bradley Walker
By ACCIDENT I got a real schooling in neck tension and how it affects seating depth. I shot all 300 rounds of my Lapua brass. I took them out of the box, ran them through an expander, and shot them. After running them through the expander they measured .2665". The outside dimension of the loaded round is .2685". Bullet seating pressure was pretty mild and seating depth was holding .001".
I shot all of these once.
Then I did two things simulataniously. I started to size all my once fired brass with my new Redding bushing die (.266" bushing") and I bought a US cleaner to clean the brass after sizing.
Now bullets would not seat at all... I mean I destroyed some bullets. I use a Wilson seating die, and the bullet was obviously being bulged at the pressure ring at the tip of the Wilson seater.
So, I assumed it was the US cleaner "too clean" and I started in on trying inside neck lubes.... I've tried several... Results were not really very good. Seating depths were all over the place.
Well... I was cruising along measuring stuff and I found out all my sized brass was .264"!!! WTF??? I measured my Redding bushing... guess what it was??? That's right .264"!!! No wonder!!! I believe it is obviously mismarked.
So I ran some brass through the expander again and seated some bullets... back to normal (at least my normal).
Lost stroy short the best groups I get are from properly seated bullets. I think that going from 70-80 bullets to 107s REALLY makes it more important to have that tension right. There is so much bearing surface on the long bullets, they require even less tension.
I am even going to go out on a limb and say the reason light tension seats more consistent is because the seater is micro deforming the nose of the bullet.
I shot all of these once.
Then I did two things simulataniously. I started to size all my once fired brass with my new Redding bushing die (.266" bushing") and I bought a US cleaner to clean the brass after sizing.
Now bullets would not seat at all... I mean I destroyed some bullets. I use a Wilson seating die, and the bullet was obviously being bulged at the pressure ring at the tip of the Wilson seater.
So, I assumed it was the US cleaner "too clean" and I started in on trying inside neck lubes.... I've tried several... Results were not really very good. Seating depths were all over the place.
Well... I was cruising along measuring stuff and I found out all my sized brass was .264"!!! WTF??? I measured my Redding bushing... guess what it was??? That's right .264"!!! No wonder!!! I believe it is obviously mismarked.
So I ran some brass through the expander again and seated some bullets... back to normal (at least my normal).
Lost stroy short the best groups I get are from properly seated bullets. I think that going from 70-80 bullets to 107s REALLY makes it more important to have that tension right. There is so much bearing surface on the long bullets, they require even less tension.
I am even going to go out on a limb and say the reason light tension seats more consistent is because the seater is micro deforming the nose of the bullet.