Are there significant differences in the weight of the bullet itself between different rounds of the same make? Or are you weighing the entire cartridge and finding differences between them from one make?
Try the rim thickness too. I like to batch out a 1000 rounds at a time, first for rim thickness then for weight. Helps on accuracy for sure.
Candocad.
Try the rim thickness too. I like to batch out a 1000 rounds at a time, first for rim thickness then for weight. Helps on accuracy for sure.
Candocad.
I'd be doing the same if I had easy access. In my case, it was a way to determine why i was getting odd groupings.
The key most often is to find the ammo that shoots best in your rifle. That ammo will not be bulk ammo and most usually it will be match ammo. It is necessary, of course, to balance the cost of the ammo with its shooting behaviour. Maybe entry level match ammo like SK Standard Plus is the best for the average sporter rifle -- the CZ's, Savages, and Marlins (in no particular order). It may not be affordable to shoot Midas or R50 or Tenex at around $200 a brick just to try to wring out a very small fraction of an inch with a sporter rifle, when SK will do almost as well as the rifle itself is capable of shooting.
Some nice groups, RabidM4U5. The ones that aren't as tight -- are any of them shooter-related or are they all barrel and/or ammo-related?![]()
Some nice groups, RabidM4U5. The ones that aren't as tight -- are any of them shooter-related or are they all barrel and/or ammo-related?![]()
Agreed. A .22 target shooter who is much more experienced than me sold me on rim thickness measurement a few years back. I've just been too lazy to spend the extra time after weighing. Besides, after sorting by weight and rim thickness, you end up with a relatively small percentage of accurate ammo. Makes you realize why match-grade .22LR is so pricey.
You do have easy access! Go on a distributor's website, click the ammos you like to add to cart, pay, wait for delivery! It's what all of us who shoot SK/Lapua/Eley/RWS do. Getting a case of 5000 rounds maximizes the ammo to shipping cost value, it's only a few $ more than just a brick or two. Having little to no variation in weight round to round of the same brand would be more indicative of performance potential, then powder charge, powder burn rate, bullet shape and lubricant formula complete the package that may or may not hit the harmonic sweet spot in your individual barrel.
My take on sorting rim thickness is the high quality ammo is already so consistent that it's a waste of time. I've measured Thunderbolts with an extreme variation of 0.035"-0.046" in the same box. Most were 0.039"-0.043" with only the odd one pushing the limits one way or the other. Sorting rims was again a waste of time, at this grade of ammo there is also too much variation of priming mix and powder charge round to round which has a much more dramatic effect on performance. Can't put lipstick on a pig and expect it to change into a beautiful woman. I'm not remembering if I also weighed some Thunderbolts, though I have also tested SK Magazine in 3 groups, No Sort, Rim Sort, Rim Sort and Weight Sort, and could tell no discernible performance difference.
SK has shot many a tight group for me matching the accuracy of all the higher grade Lapua, though the better stuff tends to have a few less fliers than the SK. There is no guarantee high accuracy will be attained by virtue of shooting expensive ammo alone. Shot Eley Edge and Match from my 64 MSR and 0/20 groups were under 1/2" a handful over 1". The other day I re-tested Eley Sport (their cheapest entry-level ammo green box) and got very similar performance as SK was giving me, I think it'll be my substitute practice ammo during this SK/Lapua shortage. In this particular rifle, $6.95/box ammo smoked the $16.5/box ammo, go figure. The bullet shape and driving band length is different between the sport and edge/match.
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I bought some Eley Tennex to test the theory. Minimal variance in weight, in fact I sorted them in to two batches, and that was after rim thickness measuring. Yes, you pay for this level of consistency.
I find the bulk boxes of say Federal Match rim thickness batched and then weighed and sorted gives you a pretty accurate round to shoot with. A poor mans approach to target ammo you could say? But I find it works, and it certainly make for cheap, accurate shooting!
Candocad.
That's sort of where I was going with this. Lack of easy access to better ammo is my issue. I'm not going to buy a case when I'm not sure if the rifle will like it. I need a couple of boxes of this and that to try first. Then I'll buy a truckload of it. For now, this should help improve things a little.
Some nice groups, RabidM4U5. The ones that aren't as tight -- are any of them shooter-related or are they all barrel and/or ammo-related?![]()