Weight-Sorting Cases: Is it Worthwhile?

Could be I'm laying pearls before swine (as I've been told that I often do) but hopefully some of these guys get it and take advantage of what has taken alot of time and money to learn.
It's truly a shame that you feel that you have had to lay pearls before us swine! But rest assured that I and the other porcine members of the forum appreciate it.;)
 
I would hope all the information shared is helpful to someone.
I feel most would do the sharing with good intensions.

Many factors will decide what is needed for each individual.
This is the hard part.
Maybe less than 1% of reloaders can afford to go full “F class” in components, reloading equipment, and the rifle and optics.
Some that have that goal from the get go, can maybe do it. Won’t be cheap.
That leaves 99% of the rest of us making goals and steps to go towards, and probably in stages, to a goal that likely will change anyway.
Even F class guys probably bought a basic reloading kit at one time.
I myself want better everything, but money is tight, time is short, so we do what we can when we can. Hopefully not spend too much on things we won’t t use later, but we can sell or give it away to the next new guy. I am helping two other guys out with reloading, based on information I have read, learned from those who were nice enough to share, and of course time and money spent.
I certainly can not teach anyone anything about F class, but I am able to get them well on their way to learning the hobby and running on somewhat of a lower budget.
Do you need a high end scale when running a factory barrel, only shoot 10-30 rounds a year, factory stock, do they need to buy enough of the same lot of powder, primers, brass and bullets for the expected barrel life for 1/4-1/3 moa, do they even have access to long range, weigh primers, weight brass, will the thick brass even fit in the factory chamber without turning, do you need to turn necks, what’s a donut, now what to do, lube the neck, the case, dry tumble, wet tumble, anneal, powder storage, humidity and weigh of powder when loading, temp…… not even into shooting yet.
 
I agree, but here's what happens next...

A guy feels like he's doing really well in the bean field or at the private range. Then one day he finds himself shooting long range with a bunch of guys who are hard core range rats.

That is when he finds out how he's really doing. Until that day, he can be happy with whatever..
I think the easiest way for someone to find out how they basically stack up is to run a set of targets from 300 to 1,000 meters , score them honestly and look up what their score corresponds to as per the DCRA classifications .
Cat
 
I'd say that this is the closes to scientific reloading I heard of. I believe in precision reloading and how it makes smaller groups. I think most hunters don't conduct precision reloading, and that's fine, however I do, and it's the journey that makes it fun. Do I need precision reloading and accuracy for my style of hunting?.....absolutely not! Reason: average distance of big game shot is about 150 yards, and that's from about 250 big game animals. Therefore, I give great credit to those guys who conduct precision reloading in the fields of competitive shooting, these are the science guys of reloading.

Hold on. You say you conduct precision reloading. What do you use and what is your method?
 
First go at 1000 yards my groups sucked, 14" 10 shots.

To improve, got scopes that retain zero, return to zero and dial correctly. Bed rifles that do not have a bedding system, Degrease all interfaces on scope mounting and rings.

Handloads, obtain a good target bullet and sort them to see what the variances are, good brass and do the same.

Obtain good measuring tools, dial caliper, scale FX120i, and learn how to use them.

Various ways of prepping a case. A new case is sized to insure case mouths are round and to adjust case fitment ( this may include bumping shoulder back or creating a false shoulder ) in the chamber. Starting with a low-range load (for pressure) (and as Mr. Glasscock recommends) load two rounds each from 0.008" of the rifling and adding 0.003" of seating depth to every set of two. You are finding a good seating depth while fire forming the new brass.

Fired brass prep regime is to clean out side neck with 000 steel wool, anneal, run a nylon brush in and out of the neck (leave carbon in), Use a Redding body die, Lee collet die and a Forester bullet seater. Primers are seated with the Frankford Armory hand held primer tool.

So once seating depth is ascertained, develop a model in QL to get close to a charge weight and barrel time. Next load 5 rounds and check velocities (LabRadar) adjust the model to get an OBT.

My ES's following this are normally in the 15 ft/s range with many 5 and 10 shot strings being < than double digit.

So from a 14" (~1.4 moa) group at the start , I'm down to <0.4 moa 5 shot and <0.8 moa for 10 shots, best case in competition.

I do not have a custom rifle other than re-barreled Tikka's and a Savage LRP and mid -range quality scopes that are reliable.

As I have progressed most time is spent on bench technique and reading the wind now.

If minutia is your game , handloading is a treasure.
 
Another swine reporting in. :)

Thanks BCBRAD. I love your real life example of tightening up your reloading process and getting solid results.
 
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