So I've just been loading some 223 Rem to fire-form some new Lapua brass. I was having a frustrating time with bullet seating and trying to get my Redding die right. When I got one round right (i.e. hit my target CBTO) the next one would be incorrect. Measured CBTO was going all over the place.
So I decided to measure a few of the bullets. (I'm using the Forster Datum Dial Kit both for measuring the bullets themselves and CBTO of loaded cartridges.) The actual bullets, in a very small sample, varied from 0.4015" to 0.4090", so 7.5 thou. Seems pretty crap. (There was a 5 thou difference in OAL of these bullets.)
Initially I was thinking this was the cause of the problem. However, if my Forster Dial Kit was seating the bullet it would merely seat the longer BBTO ones deeper in the case. Not great but once seated, the CBTO ought to measure the same (absent operator error). Of course, the Redding VLD stem is doing the seating and the point on the ogive where this touches the bullet is very likely different from where the Dial Kit touches but, again, if this difference remained constant then the longer BBTO bullets would simply be seated deeper. Given measured CBTO was moving around from one round to the next - I was getting differences in excess of 4-5 thou - without the die being adjusted suggests either operator error, an issue with the die, or that the very small length from where the Dial Kit touches the ogive vs where the seating stem touches is varying. If it's the latter, a variance that large over such a small distance seems REALLY crap.
I've put the rounds that measured long back through the die and the measurement doesn't budge.
Perplexed...
These are just fire-forming rounds but they could just as easily not be.
So I decided to measure a few of the bullets. (I'm using the Forster Datum Dial Kit both for measuring the bullets themselves and CBTO of loaded cartridges.) The actual bullets, in a very small sample, varied from 0.4015" to 0.4090", so 7.5 thou. Seems pretty crap. (There was a 5 thou difference in OAL of these bullets.)
Initially I was thinking this was the cause of the problem. However, if my Forster Dial Kit was seating the bullet it would merely seat the longer BBTO ones deeper in the case. Not great but once seated, the CBTO ought to measure the same (absent operator error). Of course, the Redding VLD stem is doing the seating and the point on the ogive where this touches the bullet is very likely different from where the Dial Kit touches but, again, if this difference remained constant then the longer BBTO bullets would simply be seated deeper. Given measured CBTO was moving around from one round to the next - I was getting differences in excess of 4-5 thou - without the die being adjusted suggests either operator error, an issue with the die, or that the very small length from where the Dial Kit touches the ogive vs where the seating stem touches is varying. If it's the latter, a variance that large over such a small distance seems REALLY crap.
I've put the rounds that measured long back through the die and the measurement doesn't budge.
Perplexed...
These are just fire-forming rounds but they could just as easily not be.