- Location
- Western Manitoba
Hi Southcountryguy, I understand what you are saying, the problem lies in that without a borescope or otherway of gauging this, I may have already removed the carbon build up, as everything but Hornady factory loads easily.
Not sure on the accuracy range of the calipers, but they seem accurate enough to reliably sort out a .005 inch difference. If they were rounding, the 0.2644 should have rounded down to 0.264.
Not sure where you found the mentioned pressure signs. The only thing I ran into was being unable to close the bolt on Hornady, then Barnes factory ammo. Handloads fed and shoot very well. After cleaning, Barnes factory now loads, but Hornady does not. Just asking in case I missed a pressure sign, but I always check my primers, case heads, necks, etc for indications of danger, and have yet to see anything except a sticky bolt lift when finding what my max load in this setup was.
I think you will find that most callipers are "accurate" within 0.001" - find the box or the papers that the thing came with - is likely that is what the maker says, if it is not actually written on the tool itself. Is typical that a common micrometer says it is "accurate" to 0.0001" - so, that is 10 times more accurate than a calliper, if they are checked and verified on a standard - is typical that a Mitutoyo micrometer (used to) comes with an ASTM certified standard in the box - I am not aware of any brand of calliper that comes with one. Most machinists will tell you that most users can measure with a calliper within about 0.005" of the "true" value - "user error" in the amount of tension, square-ness, etc.
I found it gets more complicated to measure the diameter on a cylinder - like a bullet - because you are also concerned about how "round" it is - so there are potentially hundreds of diameters on that same cylinder to measure - to see if they are the same or not. And I found it is very difficult to get back to precisely the same diameter to repeat a measurement a couple times to verify my numbers.
Do not confuse a readout as "accuracy" - I notice at least a couple made-in-China callipers that I bought from NAPA store, they say on their box they are "accurate within 0.001", although they have a display that shows to four decimals. I am sure most can realize that if an object has a "true" dimension of .0230", and if the calliper is "accurate within 0.001", and if the user is "perfect" with it - no user error - that display will read any number from 0.022" to 0.024" and will be "within 0.001" of the true value. I suspect you are fooling yourself to think you will measure to 0.0001" accuracy, with a hand held calliper.
If I followed your post above (#36), you are proposing to distinguish between bullets with diameter of 0.2644" and 0.2645"? Can be done, but I do not own the tooling, nor do I have the measuring skill to do that. And no maker will make a product to that precision - especially a product sold in bulk or quantity greater than about one - what will be produced and sold to a customer will have a "plus/minus" tolerance - so +/- 0.01"(?) +/- 0.001"(?) or perhaps +/- 0.0001"(?) from nominal.
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