The same Case/powder charge/bullet will give less pressure if I seat the bullet deeper, right? Or is the inverse?
I'm in doubt and I just wanted to be sure.
Jamming bullets into the lands is not a good idea. Basically it makes the round length at time of firing totally unpredictable and it also precludes the unfired round from being removed without firing. Seat your bullets .010 - .020" off the lands and don't worry about chamber pressure. As long as you follow the powder recipe in your manual you will be fine.
Jamming bullets into the lands is not a good idea. Basically it makes the round length at time of firing totally unpredictable
Really? These targets were shot with the bullets jammed about 0.010" into the lands.
![]()
Yea, .010" is fine but they were talking about going .030" or more. Big difference.
I am well aware of the accuracy potential of what you are talking about.
Unless you seat the bullet with a lot of neck tension, or crimp them, they are not going to stay at 0.030". My view is that once you go for a jam with a typical 0.002" neck tension you are just pushing it in as far as it wants to go. The theoretical jam is just a number... The real risk is that with certain combinations of jam and neck tension, the bullet will stay in the barrel if you change your mind about shooting and decide to extract the round. Not a good combination for hunting.
Correct. And my point with a large jam value is that when the bullet inevitably moves back there is no way to know how far and it would be silly to think each round will set back the exact same, which means the length just prior to firing will be totally inconsistent.
And my point is that when I do jam them and let them set themselves back I get very consistent targets! When I jump them, the group sizes open up. YMMV
Well, My rifle is different I guess. I push my bullets 0.250" in the lands, as my chamber is soooo small, only 2.630", and I seat my bullets to have 2.820" or 2.880", depending on the bullet type. I remove unfired cartridges often from the chamber without any issues. If a measure back the cartridge, it's still ats its initial COAL, so no changes here. I have very good groups with multiples bullets weight and brands (sub MOA) so I don't have actually issues with that.
What I have noticed that is bizzare, it's when I tried to develop a load for 208gr ELD. The first ladder test I originally seated them by mistake at 2.820" COAL, then the second round of fine tunning the load I loaded them at 2.880", so all the velocities were different, much higher. See the results by yourself:
First ladder test at 2.820"
![]()
Then load tunning at 2.880"
![]()
Around 80fps faster or more! So that why I was confused about deeper = Slower...
Dark
Well, I dont think that the plastic tip of the Hornady ELD are varying more than .003" from bullet to bullet, am I wrong?You know that COAL has nothing consistent to do with a bullet's distance from the lands right? Tips or metaplats vary bullet to bullet, let alone between different types of bullets. You have to use a comparator to measure from the cartridge base to the spot where the bullet diameter is the same as the bore.
Well, I dont think that the plastic tip of the Hornady ELD are varying more than .003" from bullet to bullet, am I wrong?
Dark
Would it be any more variable than your seating die? Your not changing the headspace or throat demensions, why wouldn't they be different if pushed back off the ogive, What would change between each round?Correct. And my point with a large jam value is that when the bullet inevitably moves back there is no way to know how far and it would be silly to think each round will set back the exact same, which means the length just prior to firing will be totally inconsistent.



























