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ThanksIt’s package deal, Terry. You have to try to determine which bullets you’ll be using and what their pressure ring dimension is. Then you need to decide what neck thickness you are going to run with. I use .0086 on the PPC. Then you need to decide how much neck clearance you wish to have. And then you need a reamer with that dimension.
You can also work in reverse. Decide on a reamer, take the neck dimension on it, add .002 for clearance, add neck thickness dimension, I use .0086, then add the diameter of the bullet at the pressure ring and you are good to go.
Not everyone agrees on what neck diameter and how much clearance is best but my math goes like this: bullet at pressure ring .2434, two neck thickness measures .0086, two clearance measures of .001 = .002 reamer neck dimension = .262, I think.
Hey..... I didn't know other people did this!I talked with two great 1000 yard shooters on this before but I never questioned their reasoning. They BOTH strongly encouraged me to adjust my neck thickness by .0002” at the time when I was just getting into LR BR. So I just did what they said. I am assuming they had done some testing and found what worked best for them or that particular reamer. Hopefully they will chime in.
Long range bullets have pressure rings too.Hey..... I didn't know other people did this!
"Thin to win" is specifically a short range (PPC) BR phrase. Just like "throwing loads" is a completely acceptable PPC thing.
IMO a lot of stuff is of dire importance in long-range pressure-ringless loading but immaterial to short-range.
Just like John Force doesn't have a lap time on the Nurburgring