For many years my loads for the dog towns used seating depths ranging from
"slightly" into the lands to a few thousands deeper into the lands -----never had any success
at or close to "full jam". This method seemed to get tuned to a "good but not necessarily
optimum" slot without wasting too many shots.
I'm now playing with a 222 that has shown me that some good tunes occur slightly,
.005" to .010" off the lands.
I haven't tried seating further into the lands but plan to look for a good tune that's
further into the lands. I've never found success at or near full jam but haven't given up on
the idea that a bullet "somewhere into the lands" has a better chance at good bore alignment.
I hear the word "jam" used a lot and wonder how successful others have been at a true
full jam-----am I missing something good ?
I'd appreciate hearing more about success at full jam.
A, Weldy
My definition of "full Jam" is having the bullet seated longer, and putting the cartridge in the rifle, and closing the bolt, thus pushing the bullet into the lands at "full Jam", and back somewhat in the case.
In my experience, benchrest shooters use this method, then they deduct some number, like .007, and seat there to start. Then they adjust in either direction to best group.
Of course, the amount of jam you have is dependent on the state of the lands, and on the fit of the bullet in the case (amount of diametric interference) and the neck wall thickness, and it obviously varies from rifle to rifle, and with case fit.
You are not missing anything.
It is still a relative measurement, and you adjust your seating depth from that point, and let the target tell you when to stop adjusting.
I suggest it is easier to use a Hornady OAL gage to find the start of the lands. (Suggestion, Hornady seems to want you to press on the gage very very softly. I suggest you press firmly but not so hard that you feel it "click" into the lands)
Better yet, use the Wheeler methods to find case sizing and seating depths. Very repeatable.
https://www.wheeleraccuracy.com/videos