I'm shooting a stock savage F-class in 6.5 x 284. Its a 1/2 MOA gun and I rarely shoot past 300m with it. This is a pic from my last range trip.It really depends on how accurate your rifle is, if you have a custom or semi-custom or a factory rifle that already shows great promise it may be worth your while.
I'm shooting a stock savage F-class in 6.5 x 284. Its a 1/2 MOA gun and I rarely shoot past 300m with it. This is a pic from my last range trip.
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appreciate the reply. Have you always done it this way or did you progress from a simple full length size, trim and chamfer?I'm doing it because I shoot LR and there I can see my personnal limit and the rifle limit. Just want to see small group size at 1 km.
Plus I feel good that my rounds are intouchable by any commercial ammo.
Its all in consistency.
Mush
appreciate the reply. Have you always done it this way or did you progress from a simple full length size, trim and chamfer?
out of curiosity what size
of groups are you shooting at 1000?
I'm not shooting a typical hunting rifle and I'm flattered you think that's a 300 yard target.Annealing isn't about accuracy. It's about increasing case life. And it's only done when one case, usually the mouth, cracks.
The rest of it is mostly bench rest loading and won't increase accuracy out of a typical hunting rifle. Especially if that rifle has a stock barrel and trigger.
I very much doubt using over priced factory brass will make any difference. That target at 300? If it is, your rifle is way sub-half minute.
A small group at 1,000 is 10". One MOA.
Annealing isn't about accuracy. It's about increasing case life. And it's only done when one case, usually the mouth, cracks.
The rest of it is mostly bench rest loading and won't increase accuracy out of a typical hunting rifle. Especially if that rifle has a stock barrel and trigger.
I very much doubt using over priced factory brass will make any difference. That target at 300? If it is, your rifle is way sub-half minute.
A small group at 1,000 is 10". One MOA.
I read on here about all you guys that turn necks, anneal, weight sort etc, etc. This is way more than what I do and I'm wondering if the results are worth the time and effort?
My goal when I started was to shoot 1/2 minute groups and I'm averaging that now. The only thing left is to complete the challenges over in the precision forum, which I hope to do shortly. Now I'm hoping to hear from some guys that maybe started out with low to mid range equipment and simple loading procedures and since taken it to the next level. When did you decide to start turning necks etc? When should I upgrade my rifle? How much of a difference does any of it make?Depends, are you happy with your groups or not? Is that the practical limit of your rifle? Have a shooter better than you shoot your rifle and loads....
After a while, it becomes a game of largely diminishing returns. I found going from any lower than the 0.4-0.3 MOA range is not worth it for me, and investing time into reading the wind by shooting more and reloading less tightened my long range groups.
All depends on your goals!
Some interesting info in there, thanks. that all goes against what I read about lots on this forum. I guess that in a sense is what I'm trying to sort out. FWIW I am using Lapua brass.Your asking about case prep on a stock factory rifle with a standard size SAAMI chamber, so here is something that was said "humorously" by the late Jim Hull of the Sierra test lab and compeditive shooter who was a strong advocate of full length resizing.
"I get my best accuracy when the cartridge fits the chamber like a rat turd in a violin case".
Now remember this, perfectly made cartridge cases are a scarce as hens teeth, meaning you will almost always have cases with unequal case wall thickness that will warp when fired.
A full length resized cartridge case is supported by the bolt face and the bullet in the throat of the chamber. Meaning the body of the case and neck never touch the chamber walls and cause any misalignment with the bore.
Below, the rear of the case is supported by the bolt face.
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And the front of the case is supported by the bullet in the chamber throat, and the body and neck of the case has no influence on centering the bullet in the chamber.
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Weight sorting cases only applies to cases from the same lot number of of cases, and does not work well with mixed brass of the same manufacture because the internal volume of the cases differ so much. Meaning the internal volume of the case H2O weight is what controls chamber pressure and not the weight of the case. Trust me, I had three five gallon buckets of once fired .223/5.56 cases given to me that I tried sorting by weight and then checked the case capacity on and it was all over the place. This type brass is OK for shooting an AR15 carbine but my bolt action rifles use better quality brass from the same lot.
Many of the competitive shooters at http://www.accurateshooter.com/ buy Lapua brass and do nothing to the brass prior to shooting. So your question really deals with the quality of the brass and its uniformity and sorting and prepping standard off the shelf brass can be more trouble than its worth.
Below Kevin Thomas of Team Lapua USA knew Jim Hull and also shares his full length sizing sentiments and uses Lapua brass for all his shooting
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Bottom line, the average off the shelf factory rifle with a standard SAAMI chamber will normally not show much improvement by doing a lot of brass prep, BUT good quality brass will always shoot better than second rate brass.
Meaning good quality brass needs minimal work done to it to shoot well and average brass can drive you up the wall trying to make it better.



























