Yup, that's the tools I use.jcampbellsmith said:See page 2.
http://www.hornady.com/assets/files/catalog/2009/69-70_precision_gauges.pdf
Regards JCS
Martin in Aus. said:Use a Lee Collett die - resize a fired clean case by screwing down the LC die until it re-sizes the neck just enough to hold the projectile. With the firing pin removed, gently chamber the unprimed dummy round, then open the bolt and place a finger on the round to stop it from being ejected. Remove the round gently. Measure the base to ogive distance with a comparator such as Sinclair or Stoney Point sell, this will give you the measurement to the lands for that specific round. Screw in the die slightly and re-measure until you get the jump (if thats what you want). Use gentle movement to avoid the projectile being slightly jammed when closing the bolt. Zero your caliper with with the comparator in place.
Martin
I use this method as well and now that this barrel has 1500 rounds through it I wonder how acurate it is.shooter63 said:have your smith use the piece he cuts off your barrel blank end then run the same cutter in it you chambered the barrel with then split it half way back you then can see rifling also can turn dummy rd & see where rifling touches bullet also the hornaby guage mentioned above works good also i use both just to be certain regards shooter63