OK, I have been reloading for a couple of months and have been doing it all by the books. I want to start loading my bullets closer to the rifling.
I took a bullet and seated it extra long in the case. I marked it with marker and closed the bolt on my REM 700 .223. I did it 3 times and found an average overall length of 2.412" when I extracted the dummy round.
I am using 50 grain NOS BT which have an overall length of .800". If my case is trimmed to 1.750, and my bullet is .800" long, with the bullet touching the rifling, I only have .138" inside the neck and if you consider the fact that the bullet is a BT, there is even less in contact with the brass. If I want to seat the bullet .020 away back from the rifling, that still only leaves .158 in the brass.
What do most people do in this case? Is it more important to be seated closer to the rifling or have say a .200 " contact with the brass so that proper pressure can be built up? I was thinking of seating the bullet for an overall length of 2.340, leaving .21 in the neck and .07 to the rifling. Are there any normal prctices or does one just mess around with seating depth to find the sweet spot for their gun?
I took a bullet and seated it extra long in the case. I marked it with marker and closed the bolt on my REM 700 .223. I did it 3 times and found an average overall length of 2.412" when I extracted the dummy round.
I am using 50 grain NOS BT which have an overall length of .800". If my case is trimmed to 1.750, and my bullet is .800" long, with the bullet touching the rifling, I only have .138" inside the neck and if you consider the fact that the bullet is a BT, there is even less in contact with the brass. If I want to seat the bullet .020 away back from the rifling, that still only leaves .158 in the brass.
What do most people do in this case? Is it more important to be seated closer to the rifling or have say a .200 " contact with the brass so that proper pressure can be built up? I was thinking of seating the bullet for an overall length of 2.340, leaving .21 in the neck and .07 to the rifling. Are there any normal prctices or does one just mess around with seating depth to find the sweet spot for their gun?