Follow along with the video below to see how to install our site as a web app on your home screen.
Note: This feature may not be available in some browsers.
Not if your base to seater stem number and base to ogive number had variances between them.just a thought, if your seater stem is contacting the ogive the same for every bullet then when you measure BTO that number would be the same, a different number but they should all be the same, right ?
What are you sizing with? Bushing die or standard FL sizer? I had a lot of variations in length until I switched to bushing dies with SAC bushings to obtain the neck tension I was after. Seating was very consistent using same Hornady seater you use. I have since switched to K&M arbor press and their chamber does.RCBS single stage press, Hornady seater die with micrometer top and digital caliper
The 108 no, wanted to be touching the lands. Ive found the 140s like 20thou jump on 2 different rifles and touching on another. Them the 73 eldm liked 10 thou jumpDid they like a lot of jump in your rifle?
Impossible to tell what your rifle likes. Honestly, I’ve never found a single one of our rifles that shoots better jumping bullets as opposed to loading into the lands.I was just asking on the average, in general
I've never been fully convinced, mostly for lack of seeing any good demonstration, that loading into the lands makes a significant difference in consistency than jumping, until . . . I viewed the video on YouTube titled Bullets Hitting Bullets in Slow Motion. Looking at the caliber of people involved and their effort to get it right, they had to make an adjustment to consistently get their bullets to collide head on, which is described at the 17:00 to 19:00 minute points in the video. While they had various issues to solve to get there, loading the bullet into the rifling seemed the biggest technical solution to get the consistent results they wanted.Impossible to tell what your rifle likes. Honestly, I’ve never found a single one of our rifles that shoots better jumping bullets as opposed to loading into the lands.