The chamber sets the volume.
Another take on it by the Witch Doctor
Effects of Case Head Thickness on Ballistics and Precision
The purpose of this video is to describe the effects of case head thickness on ballistics and precision. The findings show a linear relationship between case head thickness and velocity with thinner case heads having slower velocity relative to thicker case heads. In terms of precision, the thickness that represents the average within the range of values showed the best precision. The practical implications are discussed and include case head thickness sorting in long range shooting.
https://ww.youtube.com/watch?v=VanQm9-RZxs&t=2s[/url]
Interesting but way down the rabbit for most purposes.
The chamber sets the volume. If you add more brass in the chamber there is less volume for other stuff. It's not complicated. Brass density is pretty standard.
The chamber sets the volume. If you add more brass in the chamber there is less volume for other stuff. It's not complicated. Brass density is pretty standard.
If this is a concern, measure the case volume of fireformed brass. Weight is not a good indicator of volume because mass manf cases can have variations in the external machining... different weights but very similar volumes.
I doubt you will find enough volume variation from the same lot of brass to matter. The loads may change from batch to batch but variations in cases within the same lot is rarely a problem
Jerry
PS... if you want higher levels of accuracy, I would look at the consistency in charge weight as well as the right charge weight. Then barrel and bullet quality.
So in the grand scheme of things, even if you are looking for relatively cutting edge accuracy, its pretty low on the list?
The chamber sets the volume.
I like to get at least 500 cases, preferably 1000 new cases (same lot #) and then weigh them. It only has to be dome once, so why not?
I label a bunch of pails in either 0.3 gr increments or 0.5 gr increments and then weigh.
I then transfer the brass to 50 round boxes. the lightest and the heaviest get marker "Practice only".
Then I start at one end and transfer brass to 50 round boxes. I label inside the lid the weight of that batch.
Does it make a difference. I think it does because I think it does.
OOPS! Link is not working.
Ted
Volume sorting makes more sense than weight sorting. Volume sorting is very time consuming
Once you volume sort your fired brass, you can then velocity sort it. You might end up with a handful of perfect casings
Definitely not necessary for your goals.
And I would further argue if it's a useful procedure for anyone.
It would be interesting to set up a blind test between sorted brass vs non-sorted brass. Line up a good shooter that doesn't know which brass he is shooting, and shoot a bunch of groups and take ES/SD measurements along the way. Do this over many days and see if there is collectively any difference in measurable performance, averaged out across all days of shooting.
Checking case volume is super fast and easy.... with fireformed, trimmed to same length, fill with a fine granular powder (H110 or similar).. or just use salt.
With the funnel on the neck, tap the case until it has settled leaving just a hint at the base of the funnel. Remove funnel, scrap top of neck to level... funnel on next case, dump powder in, tap case, see where it ends up... repeat. Try not to spill or just refill first case and then carry on.
A very slight difference in powder level is very visible but would be of little consequence wrt to volume. Say 1mm variation in height in the case neck of a 308win case is squat for volume but really easy to see. Pull any case that has a visibly different level for the powder... I doubt you will find many/any from the same lot of decent manf brass.
As fast as you can pour, tap and look... you have a sorted case.
Done this to sort NATO marked brass in 223... also, LC brass marked the same year. Was really surprised at how well they sorted. This is 1F, sized and prepped by me, fired and then volume sorted
Jerry