- Location
- Jameson, SK
JD is good. What is RO water?
Reverse osmosis. It's a thing from 10 years ago.
JD is good. What is RO water?
I think the potential problem starts before the trigger is pulled. My thoughts are that the position of the bullet relative to the bore centerline before the primer fires is critical, along with that first 1/4" or so of movement through the throat. If the bullet gets skewed off center at the start I think it stays that way all the way to the muzzle, and when it exits the muzzle with the bullet skewed things get much worse. I think a lot of shooters think the bullet is solid object, when in fact it is quite soft, and gets deformed by the 62,000 psi pressure behind it. At least that is my theory why my 6BR will shoot Berger 68's down to the .1's, and then sprays Berger 62's out to 3". I think that Berger 62 is too short for the long throat in my gun, and it gets skewed before it gets to the lands. Or at least I have not found any other way to explain how a group could open up that much, with only a change in bullet weight of 6 grains.
That is why I put a lot of effort into getting the bullet centerline concentric with the bore. I worry less about cartridge runout in a measuring apparatus, than I do about concentricity and alignment to the bore in the gun. And that is the basic reason behind jamming my bullets at the front, and leaving the case neck unsized at the rear. Kind of forces the bullet to line up to the bore. The problem with those 62's is that I can't jam them and keep them in the case neck at the pressure ring.
Lapua 260Rem has a tight neck, run it through the E26 expander with powder lube, that's it. Pretty sure Lapua drill the flash hole instead of punching so leave that alone.
If I was going to going through the 10 (or is that 11) case prep steps no point paying premium for Lapua.
PS. WTF is a small group? Is that 1/2, 1/4, 1/8 MOA?
PS2. Case preping sucks.
PS3. Like MP's method of prep, esp. COW method to "not strain the web area...".
So, question, not being a ####, but of your "jam them all" theory works, why not leave them all proud by .020 and use the lands as your seating die?? If you have the same powder charge in the same case volume, with the same neck tension, etc, the seating should always be consistent, therefore this should be the answer for all of us, and maybe it is....
JD is good. What is RO water?
The question was thin necks in a large chamber... lead to bad things... my answer, doesn't do anything except maybe lead to neck splits if necks get brittle (anneal the necks and you will be amazed at how much stretch it has). Bullet is well down the bore before the neck expands to ID 1 thou larger then the bullet diameter.
WRT to runout, if all the steps are taken to prep and assemble the ammo using properly formed and sized cases, the odds of runout is slim to nil. AND measuring on a proper runout gauge is relevent to the runout wrt to the bore... unless you have a chamber that is not aligned with the bore and then you have bigger problems.
I know many jam and if that works for you or the bullet, by all means. it works. Some match shooters use a soft jam and will literally set that OAL based on the throat of the rifle. The only problem is if you have a cease fire and have to extract that rd.... yeah, that can get messy. I have found that EVERY match bullet shape used today can be set OFF the lands and work superbly.. it takes some fine tuning of OAL and powder charge... no different then if you went with a jam.
Sizing the entire neck length is up to the shooter and if less works for you, fly at it. BUT I may require the ammo to live a bumpy life so having all the support on the bullet bearing surface can be a very good thing... think mag fed ammo.. in a semi. Just be aware of case bulges that may restrict proper chambering.. it is risky and not ideal if your chamber can get dirty.
Jerry
Case prep is a situation where the returns diminish more and more with the work that you do. In many cases 1/2moa is achieved with virtually no special case prep other than proper sizing, trimming cases when required, and chamfering case mouths. The extra work like deburring flash holes and turning necks, usually improves accuracy by so little that you have to look hard to notice it.
......and those little improvement are what win competitions.......with anything in life.
GGG
Case prep is a situation where the returns diminish more and more with the work that you do. In many cases 1/2moa is achieved with virtually no special case prep other than proper sizing, trimming cases when required, and chamfering case mouths. The extra work like deburring flash holes and turning necks, usually improves accuracy by so little that you have to look hard to notice it.
...
A small group is smaller than anyone else you know has ever shot. If you hang out with a bunch of gang-bangers, sub 20MOA. If you have regular, respectful conversations with Jerry, Jefferson, Yodave, Bsand, skypilot, furtaker, biged, Ron, Tomochan, etc, etc then under 1/2MOA had better be your norm.
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I have a magneto speed ,on the way to me.Brian, you should probably chrono your load. Then plug in that info to your ballistic software. It should tell you when that bullet will drop below supersonic. (With all of the inputs entered, of course.) Otherwise, all people are doing is guessing.
iSnipe will give you speeds over distances.
Yes Jerry, I know what your saying.
I'm just wondering how much velocity the 20 in barrel is gonna cost me.
Just curious is all.
I think I should be able to push the 123 scenars at about 2750 fps,without causing any over presure.
I've tryed a couple of ballistic apps,but they won't allow me to enter my barrel length.
I read about an experiment,where the guy kept cutting down his barrel,inch at a time.
Lost a little over 120 fps from 26 to 20.
How do you figure out when the bullit stops going supersonic?



























