Exactly. I tend to trust the guys using the product and as much I admire Lapua, it’s already what we might call an iffy proposition to grade ammo that is theoretically identical, to the tune of up to 75 cents a round. I don’t expect it to be like adding another liter of displacement to a race motor, but it isn’t fair at all to the buyer for it to be worse, right?
To my thinking, a production run cannot simply be divided into thirds, or whatever. There could be bad runs. We don’t want to pay $.75 for the top third of a bad run. It has to be both the best of the run, and as good as Lapua expects XAct to be, or better. I’m not saying that they don’t already try to do this, but shooters’ mileage suggests it’s not always working out, and more discouragingly, ammo cheaper than even CX can sometimes beat it all.
I don’t know anyone with guns that like higher SD’s and more irregular bullets. I imagine the amount, quality and uniformity of placement of the primer matters. There could be guns that excel at a certain specific velocity, but that velocity is not more expensive or cheaper to achieve. I do believe in testing, but I’m wondering if our testing is more-so because we can’t necessarily put any stock in labels and price we paid, and need to catch mistakes before the big matches, or to determine optimal gun/ammo compatibility.
Lapua and Eley possibly could catch some dollars from guys wanting to money flex on the line, but they shouldn’t let themselves go down that road. For every one of those guys, three more sacrificed to buy it. If it is not honest to goodness better in their behind the scenes making of the sausage, shrink these price spreads to something way more modest. And our end of this is that we can’t just suppose that in some gun somewhere, the order and price spread is justifiable. Guns shoot better ammo, better.