well do you start with a jam on your hunting rounds? Many target shooters do.
do you want a mag length round in your hunting rifle or are you willing to make it a single shot where you can seat your bullets long.
do you use target bullets in your hunting rifle or a bullet designed for proper expansion on game?
the chicken or the egg question for load devopment. powder charge first or seating depth first.
to me it really doesn't matter because by the time you are done both will be refined several times. with target rifles i start with a jam and find the powder charge then test seating depth then refine powder charge
with hunting rifles i start mag length and find the powder charge the test seating depth then refine powder charge.
Is this like a trick question or something?
If a bullet is Breech seated, or soft seated in the neck so that chambering the round sets the seating depth, does that also qualify for a jam?
If the rifle is a single shot like an 1885 Winchester, a Stevens or a Sharps, and the cartridge is chamber length, is that also magazine length since that’s the only place to carry the cartridge?
Sometimes my target bullets are my hunting bullets, because sometimes I hunt my targets. So for the most part I depend on shot placement. That would be both hunting and target shooting.
So it does not matter to me, any cartridge I load gets the same attention to detail, but often the details change.
For instance I thought about neck turning a straight wall cartridge, but I wasn’t sure where to start and stop. So I skip that step.
Then there is the issue of truing the primer pocket of a rimfire, I skip that step also. I am still working out a way to anneal the necks tho.
So since I shoot and load for a wide variety of cartridges, that require a different set of steps, I let the rifle and cartridge combination dictate the order of the process. I’m responsible for quality control and consistency.
Why would I drop powder any different, I always use a drop tube. The length varies, but not the process.
I don’t care if I seat the bullet in the neck of a cartridge, or in the barrel from the Breech end. I do it as precisely as I can.
Care and attention to detail produce the best loads. How and where you apply that care and attention will vary for many reasons.