I'm getting conflicting information from friends and even manuals as to the correct seating depth of bullets. One school of thought says that the bullet should just touch the rifling when it's seated at the correct depth. This of course means that you'd have to set your seating die each time you use a different bullet as the ogive varies depending on the weight and manufacturer. The other opinion is that the bullet should sit just off the lands a few thou and actually jump to engage the rifling.
I'm not new to reloading. I've been doing it for a while and my current method is to lightly seat a bullet in an unprimed case that ready for powder and primer. I put a bit of lube on the bullet so it won't bind on the rifling, and set it in the rifle and slowly close the bolt. I gently extract the round and then measure the overall length of the cartridge and set my seating die accordingly. I record the length in my reloading log, and I do this for each different bullet that I load.
So I'm putting 'er out there to you guys who have reams of experience and I'm wondering what your thoughts and experience tells you. I'd appreciate different input and the logic underlying the other methods. Thanks in advance.
I'm not new to reloading. I've been doing it for a while and my current method is to lightly seat a bullet in an unprimed case that ready for powder and primer. I put a bit of lube on the bullet so it won't bind on the rifling, and set it in the rifle and slowly close the bolt. I gently extract the round and then measure the overall length of the cartridge and set my seating die accordingly. I record the length in my reloading log, and I do this for each different bullet that I load.
So I'm putting 'er out there to you guys who have reams of experience and I'm wondering what your thoughts and experience tells you. I'd appreciate different input and the logic underlying the other methods. Thanks in advance.




















































