so heres an interesting topic I think..... I know for competitive precision shooters this may not be breaking news and probably useless information to the average hunter who keeps his shots to no more than 300 yards
To the hunters, gopher wackers and longrange target enthusiasts who have a need to develop loads for longrange 300 yard plus.... you might find my observations usefull
Curious to know what the thoughts of the average shooter thinks on the topic, I know most are just happy when their gun goes bang.... but more interested in the thoughts of average shooters who are looking for a little more and maybe handloading and playing with these components
I have weights sorted and tested both primers ( by weight ) and bullets ( by weight and length of OG to base ) ( berger, sierra and hornady ) but not sorted brass either by weight or volume..... maybe later
Much to my surprise I have learnt a few what I think are important things about primers and bullets and how they preform when grouped together and how they can make or break a good load
I have not gone down the path of sorting brass.... yet
My conclusion .....
One thing I can say is my SD is now in the single digits and even my bad loads still form a group of reasonable perportion at distance
Weight sorting primers has had the biggest effect I think for me.... doing a traditional bell curve I was able to sort out the very light and the very heavy.... I then using the very light, average and the heavy and made up some test loads using a gun and known load for a gun that shoots consistently in the 0.300" ( 22 Br ) , I used an AND f120i for weighing powder, micrometer seater for seating bullets to 0.001", my set up I used my Farley front rest and rear bag on a cement top bench, set out wind flags, first I confirmed my gun/load accuracy level, I then fired these at random using a Labradar to track velocity spread, much to my surprise there was over 40 fps difference between shots, only thing that was different was the primer weights and well my group was not anywhere near the 0.300 " that it produced in the first 5 shots 10 mins earlier
Now based on that info I used weight sorted primers ( all weight the same in grns ) and tested bullets.... I found the berger target/hunting and sierra smk to all weigh with in 0.002 grns and OG to base to be +/- 0.002 also so guessed these would not likely to show noticeable difference on paper with my set up and ability.... which is what I determined in the end, also concluded weight sorting is not required if your using good quality bullets
As far as any Hornady bullets tested..... well you might want to sort them
Final thoughts... weight sorting primers seems to make a difference , in SD and bullet impact point, I call it extra quality control after the factory.... all the primers are good and usable, but I proved to myself if you are unfortunate enough to have a light and heavy primer mixed in with your test loads, hunting loads or worse yet in your string in a competition.... your probably not gonna be happy with the results at distance
My 2 cents worth of observation ..... G
To the hunters, gopher wackers and longrange target enthusiasts who have a need to develop loads for longrange 300 yard plus.... you might find my observations usefull
Curious to know what the thoughts of the average shooter thinks on the topic, I know most are just happy when their gun goes bang.... but more interested in the thoughts of average shooters who are looking for a little more and maybe handloading and playing with these components
I have weights sorted and tested both primers ( by weight ) and bullets ( by weight and length of OG to base ) ( berger, sierra and hornady ) but not sorted brass either by weight or volume..... maybe later
Much to my surprise I have learnt a few what I think are important things about primers and bullets and how they preform when grouped together and how they can make or break a good load
I have not gone down the path of sorting brass.... yet
My conclusion .....
One thing I can say is my SD is now in the single digits and even my bad loads still form a group of reasonable perportion at distance
Weight sorting primers has had the biggest effect I think for me.... doing a traditional bell curve I was able to sort out the very light and the very heavy.... I then using the very light, average and the heavy and made up some test loads using a gun and known load for a gun that shoots consistently in the 0.300" ( 22 Br ) , I used an AND f120i for weighing powder, micrometer seater for seating bullets to 0.001", my set up I used my Farley front rest and rear bag on a cement top bench, set out wind flags, first I confirmed my gun/load accuracy level, I then fired these at random using a Labradar to track velocity spread, much to my surprise there was over 40 fps difference between shots, only thing that was different was the primer weights and well my group was not anywhere near the 0.300 " that it produced in the first 5 shots 10 mins earlier
Now based on that info I used weight sorted primers ( all weight the same in grns ) and tested bullets.... I found the berger target/hunting and sierra smk to all weigh with in 0.002 grns and OG to base to be +/- 0.002 also so guessed these would not likely to show noticeable difference on paper with my set up and ability.... which is what I determined in the end, also concluded weight sorting is not required if your using good quality bullets
As far as any Hornady bullets tested..... well you might want to sort them
Final thoughts... weight sorting primers seems to make a difference , in SD and bullet impact point, I call it extra quality control after the factory.... all the primers are good and usable, but I proved to myself if you are unfortunate enough to have a light and heavy primer mixed in with your test loads, hunting loads or worse yet in your string in a competition.... your probably not gonna be happy with the results at distance
My 2 cents worth of observation ..... G


















































