I’ve found huge improvements in my loads on two of my last three barrels by trying different primers. Everything else being the same. It’s worth testing. And I think weighing primers will reduce the number of flyers one may have.
				
			@MikeMcCasland, great set of questions. Primer sorting may be an option. Test sorted versus unsorted and see what happens.Hey Guys,
I'm not looking to start a debate on the merits of weighing primers, or if it's worth the time investment. I've already decided to give it whirl, and I've weighed out 1,000 of them into groups separated by .02gr mostly (with some extreme outliers culled entirely).
I will say I was pretty surprised by a couple of observations. First, there was way more variation than I was expecting to find. I had a range from 2.28gr all the way up to 2.52gr. Most fell right around 2.40-2.46gr; nice little bell-curve.
It's not my intent to mix any weight groups; just going to load all those that weighed the same together.
That said, I'm not going to get a chance to shoot these until my next match, but as of late I've been struggling a bit with vertical in my load. It'll hold 10-ring vertical consistently at 1,000, but it's not as good as I see from some of the top guys.
I've played around with depth in .002 graduations, but can't seem to tune it any tighter, so here we are. I think my powder node is on point as I'm in the usual velocity range for my barrel length/bullet combo, and generally speaking the gun is shooting quite well.
My question: To those that have weight sorted primers, how much (if any) improvement in vertical did you see?
Bring on the discussion; my body is ready.
Components:
200.20X
N150
Lapua Plama - turned .014"
CCI 400s
.0015 'interference fit'
AMPed every firing
Then to mess your head up a little more, that nice group at 100 yards can easily become the worst group at longer ranges. I've seen it many times. Shot screamer groups at 100 yards with certain powder/primers only to see them open up to barely MOA accuracy 500 and further. So it's best to test at longer ranges.
That's the first thing I do in any sorting exercise to test for significance.
I do test at longer ranges, but I find the loads that do the best at 100 yards also do the best at 600, 800, etc.
Whatever the dispersion angle is at 100 yards, it is only going to get worse as you increase the range.
@MikeMcCasland, great set of questions. Primer sorting may be an option. Test sorted versus unsorted and see what happens.
Few other thoughts. Do you use a reliable chrono while testing? I ask as that would be a good way to determine if your ES is not as tight as it could be, which would point towards primer inconsistencies or your powder node being slightly off (for a 20 shot string an ES of 20 or less is ideal).
if your ES is tight, your challenge might be position related while firing, scope magnification/mirage issues, or seating depth issues.
If your ES is not ideal, you could examine your brass prep and/or do a simple test at LR.
Load up 3 rounds per charge weight, in .1 grain increments surrounding your current load. For example, if your current node was 50.3, then load 50.1, 50.2, 50.3, 50.4, 50.5. Shoot them round robin at 1,000 yards to see if any of them sing for you (keep same POA and measure vertical dispersion...don’t worry about horizontal).
From direct experience I can share that @dmoran helped me tremendously in identifying positive compensation at 1,000 yards by tweaking my node up or down by a single .1 grain charge. It works miracles to test this!
Let us know what you find.
It does help, and I just re-read that section so thanks for the cite.
Per my spreadsheet this load is averaging .36 MOA at 300 the 6 times (30 rounds) I've shot it for testing. I'm still inexperienced relative to a lot of guys, but felt like that was good enough to be dangerous in club matches, so just rolled with it.
I would think Muzzle Velocity differences are the only logical effect that primer weight variations can make. Any other effect, such a harmonics or wind drift down range would have had to flow from MV differences.
If that hypothesis is true, then even a 50 yard range with D Christian’s chrono recommendation would determine completely, whether weight sorting helps. Plus, if you just go by MV, you take gun handling, bullet variation and the environment out of the equation.
You cant get a 1000 yards on your place for a practice range?I've read quite a bit about positive compensation, and understood about half of it.My big challenge in testing the theories is the only 1,000 yard range is ~3 hours (one way) from me. Right now I have the ability to test on paper at 300 yards, or on steel out to 600; which means all my testing is done at 300.
Your doing well for the short time you've been shooting with us and remember you are shooting against some of the top FTR shooters in the country!
There is lots of good advice here but it's a non-linear progression from 300->600->1000 so for me a .36 MOA @ 300yd gun is not going to compete with the top shooters at 1K. Sorting primers may help but not that much. Remember what Tom said - MOST IMPORTANTLY, does it prefer the seating position and powder charge. If it's as good as it's going to get with N150 you may want to try a different powder/primer/.... If you tried others and it's still no good it could be that its just a decent mid-range barrel. I've got a few in that pile.
Also, measuring vertical at Bayou at 1K with a strong tail wind is a good way to drive yourself crazy. There were full 1-2 MOA vertical shifts out there last Sunday.
You cant get a 1000 yards on your place for a practice range?
You may want to ask them if they also measure there primers.@Alex Wheeler or @tom do you weigh primers?
Yes, please, somebody test!
'Cuz I'm not seeing any reason to pay attention to primer weights. Lots of other things, but not that.
pretty sure, like me, he measures them also.
