How do you guys determine when a bullet is seated "to the lands". I want to experiment with seating depths and would like to know how to determine this reliably.
Close the bolt on your rifle, put a cleaning rod down the barrel until it touches the bolt, threaded end down, mark by putting a piece of masking tape on the rod at the muzzle.
Next, put a bullet (not cartridge) in the chamber and hold it in firm against the lands with the eraser end of a pencil. Next, put your cleaning rod in threaded end first until it reaches the bullet, then mark the rod with a piece of tape at the muzzle. Measure with calipers between the tape marks and you have your OAL to the lands.
Do this twice two confirm.
You should do this anytime you change bullet brands, weights, or styles.
This one is open to huge error. The gauge is probably the best but unfortunately not free.
Close the bolt on your rifle, put a cleaning rod down the barrel until it touches the bolt, threaded end down, mark by putting a piece of masking tape on the rod at the muzzle.
Next, put a bullet (not cartridge) in the chamber and hold it in firm against the lands with the eraser end of a pencil. Next, put your cleaning rod in threaded end first until it reaches the bullet, then mark the rod with a piece of tape at the muzzle. Measure with calipers between the tape marks and you have your OAL to the lands.
Do this twice two confirm.
You should do this anytime you change bullet brands, weights, or styles.
Please explain? The gauges do not take in to account the different bullet shapes and styles which results in inaccurate seating depths. Take the ogive of a Barnes TSX and compare it to the ogive of a Hornady Sp.
The style that you give is more open to fault, I use to use a form of this method. You need quite a bit of pressure on your bolt to force a bullet into a sized case, then the bullet will "stick" into the lands and pull back when you extract giving you a longer OAL reading.
I normally use Seating Depth Tool, the one I have is made by Stoney Point if not mistaken and need a case. It is very easy to use.
Also it is good to have bullet comparator, I use Sinclair one.
I normally use Seating Depth Tool, the one I have is made by Stoney Point if not mistaken and need a case. It is very easy to use.
Also it is good to have bullet comparator, I use Sinclair one.
take a spent case, ( a bullet should slide down the neck with room to spare) press edge of neck on hard surface to dent it. Make the dent as small as possible to apply a very, VERY light squeeze on the bullet, push bullet into neck so it sticks out as far as possible. gently chamber the round as though it was a single shot. close bolt open bolt and close it again. gently remove round and measure. this is your distance to the lands with this particular bullet.
price 0 dollars-0 cents
time less than 1 minute
This is the way I do it, too. I sometimes barely put the case in the sizing die to slightly tighten the neck to hold the bullet. Quick, accurate and safe. I don't know why you would buy an extra tool.