palerider said:
that thread put my dreams of building a bench rest rifle in the closet for awhile. just starting out reloading so alot to learn before i even jump into that pool.
I know i will be rereading that thread again this weekend if not 10X's.
If i started to understand it is that case volume is more important than case wieght? All else set aside.
Thanks for the link
Palerider...
Don't let that thread throw water on your desire to have a top grade rifle.
Weighing cases can be productive, but you must determine to what level does it matter.
If you have a 6mm-Jazbo rifle, and it is a benchrest or match grade rifle... if you have a batch of cases that vary from 150 to 180 grains, it surely would help a lot to sort them by weight.
But by what increment?
Sorting cases to +/- 10 grains... +/- 1 grain... +/- 0.1 grain... or +/- 0.001 grain.
At what point does it stop making a difference?
I bought a batch of Fed Gold Match brass for a match rifle that was a very good shooter,and still is!!), and the rifle's performance went in the toilet.
It took weeks of looking for the problem before I discovered that the weight of the cases was spread across 20+ grains. When they were sorted by weight, and one batch was used, the rifle came back to life.
So, I can tell you from personal experance that a +/- 10 spread sucks, and needs to be sorted.
Using the same rifle, I took one case and marked it with a sharpie marker, and loading at the range, I shot the same case, in the same position in the chamber, 28 times at the range to see if there were absolutely NO variable in the case, what could I expect.
Well, you won't get "0" ES, and a single hole group.
So... somewhere between +/- 10 grains, and "0" grains, there is a point when the sorting increment stops making any difference - the difference gets lost in "the noise".
So if you ARE going to weight cases, you need to determine what is a reasonable point to pick, and what is anal compulsive.
Some time back, a new kid on this site asked about case prep for a Prairie Dog shoot in South Dakota, and said that he had two Rem 700 factory "Varmint Special" rifles, a 222 and a 223, with 200 pieces of new Rem brass in each caliber. He didn't have much money, and was a fairly new handloader.
The advice he got from the anal BR group was to weight all the cases and separate them into groups by 0.1 grains.
Now, WHAT THE HELL FOR??? It's a friggin' factory rifle, shooting PDs under the worst wind conditions this side of the Russian Tundra...
All of the above is to try to keep this case weighing thing under control - don't let the anal compulsives ruin your day.
Go out and get your rifle.
Remember this. You will learn more, and learn it faster, by loading for a good rifle, than you will loading for a piece of crap.
With a good rifle, you you do something right, you will IMMEDIATELY see the results on paper,in teaching, they call it "instant feedback").
With a piece of crap rifle, you can do good stuff, and see no change in your shooting.
Get the nice riffle... Get one with a no turn neck that takes Lapua brass... get a 6mmBR with a no turn chamber, and you will be in "Pig Heaven"...
... enjoy life, it's short!!! Take my word for it!!!
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