when i started reloading i used a kitchen spoon for a powder measure and a Redding scale. i worked in my drafty/ dirty attic which was normally around 120 degrees in the summer. today, i have several real powder measures though i still use the Redding scale. i always work in an air conditioned area with no drafts to effect the scale. all i ever reloaded then were 30-30 and 8mm. the results were great. i never bothered with measuring cartridges or weighing bullets or any other foolish notions. i was real happy.
BUT NOW.......i am relaoding some 7mm Mauser rounds. i have chosen the 110 grain Speer HP-TNT bullets. NOW, i measure and check all sorts of things. Hell, i even wash my hands every 20 minutes or so to keep skin oils from tarnishing the brass. now that i'm taking all these precautions, i notice that none of my cartridges are coming out the same length. i measured cartridges from a box of factory Sellier and Bellott ammunition and they were all within 0.001 inch of each other. mine are nowhere near that close. i got curious and started measuring my bullets. these darned things measure from 0.960 up to 0.972. some of them are pretty pointed, but then some are so pointed it looks like you could draw blood by just touching them. others are relatively blunt. the result of this is that they don't fit up into the die the same way, so they end up coming out of the die different lengths. the difference is as much as 0.004.
here are my questions:
1. what is an acceptable amount of variation in overall length?
2. are these bullets improper given such a variation in bullet length, i.e. 0.012. (this variation occurs in a sampling of 600 bullets)
3. if i seat some of these bullets deeper, in order to get the same overall length, am i going to cause a pressure problem?
4. am i worrying about nothing?
5. why didn't i stay in my attic sweating like a whore in church, reloadin with a spoon, and havin a great time shootin my 30-30 and 8mm????????
thanks for the help......
For example I had some 30/06 180 gr Sierra Boattail soft point loads for hunting a few years ago. After hunting season I noted that the lead point on some were bent and other smashed. There was a big discussion at the local gunsmith's shop as to how that would effect preformance. Since there was a 100 yard range at the shop we shot them all. Result no effect on group. Even the bullet with the lead broken off shot in the same group.
So, what difference does all these variables make in you loads? You will have to shoot them to find out.
Good Hunting
Steve
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Every man dies, but not every man really lives!!
Have you tried a competition type of bullet seater? You don't say what die you're using, but one that doesn't seat from the tip length might help (?) the problem. You know the kind that seat from further down towards the ogive?
You said it yourself my friend. "...worrying about nothing.."
Bullets, especially HPs, seem to vary in length quite a bit.
The seating die engages the bullet further down from the tip, so if these reloads will feed through your magazine, and shoot well, don't worry about them.
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saeed@ emirates.net.ae
www.accuratereloading.com
thanks for the encouragement....that idea about the competition die might be worth investigating. i use Hornady dies. they seem pretty good. i'll check to see if they have a competition seater. if not, i'm sure someone like Redding will. anyway, thanks.... for now though, i'm gonna go have a beer.
In fact, the term Overall Cartridge Length seems to create as much (or more) confusion as any aspect of Reloading. The exact same thing you experienced (varying OCL) caused a buddy of mine to pull 40 bullets - twice. By the time he had me on the phone, he was very upset. In his case it was a HIGH Dollar Hunting bullet and he will no longer use them. Darn shame, cause he is missing out on an excellent bullet.
Just as you discovered, the variance is really in the "Overall Bullet Length". And, the highest percentage of that variance is from the Ogive forward to the Tip. It is much worse in some brands and styles than others. But, "Don't worry about it."
The important thing is to make sure the "Ogive-to-Land" distance is the same from one Lot of reloads to the next. If you are using OCL to set up the initial round of each Lot you reload, you can see in your own example that you have the potential of inducing a variance of 0.012".
That variance causes the bullet to Exit the muzzle on a different harmonic. And of course that will change the accuracy of your reloads from Lot to Lot.
I have a "File" I can send you which goes into considerable detail on whipping this problem. But, here is a short version.
Take one bullet from the box and think of it as the "Set-Up" bullet. Use whatever method you desire to determine the OCL for it to "Kiss-the-Lands". As an Example, lets say that is 2.750" OCL. Seat the "Set-Up" bullet so it is in a case at exactly 2.750" OCL and snug up the Seating Stem "Jam Nut".
Now, here is what NO ONE has ever written about as far as I can tell. Remove the Seating Die from the Press and measure the "Overall Die Length" from the top of the Seating Stem to the Die Mouth. Lets say that is a 3.850" ODL.
Record 3.850" ODL = 0.000" Off-the-Lands, on the bullet box. Now, if you want to Seat the bullets 0.020" Off-the-Lands, you adjust the Seating Die to 3.830" ODL (3.850" - 0.020" = 3.830"), snug u the Jam Nut, reverify the ODL, and screw the Seating Die into the Press. You can now begin seating bullets "from that exact same box of bullets" which will be 0.020" Off-the-Lands.
Always re-measure the ODL every time you open a new box of bullets, even if they are from the same Lot. This will compensate for Throat Erosion and when the Lots are different, will correct for manufacturing Lot-to-Lot variances.
Hope that makes some sense. If not, I can send you a longer detailed version.
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Good hunting and clean 1-shot kills, Hot Core
Great idea! I think I would call that "using your seating plug as a comparator."
Davidson & Sinclair are not going to be happy about this, but yours is obviously the right way to go.
Thanks!
So, the easy way to measure is to load a round long, chamber it, seat the bullet with the bolt, GENTLY remove it, and proceed with Hot Core's method. Unfortunately, the method doesn't work with all dies.
Gotta love this forum! FWIW, Dutch.
It's just not worth the time to try and get them all within a thousandth as I used to do. Last night I was trying to load a .30-06 with Hornady Spire Points to 3.782" (comparator measurement). More of them were probably 3.785". As long as the whole batch is consistent, well, to paraphrase your subject line, so ^%*&&%in' what?
One day a long time ago I was sitting at the Loading Bench thinking how nice it would be to have some kind of an adjustable, repeatable, Seating Depth Indicator incorporated into the Seating Stem. I looked at the Powder Measure and noticed it had a numbered gauge on it to give you a reference and was somewhat accurate (depending on the Powder). At least, it was better than nothing.
Pulled a Seating Die from the Press and just happened to pick up the Calipers at the same time. Kind of daydreaming, I slipped those Calipers over the Seating Die and it dawned on me.
Why on earth no one has ever written about doing this in any of the Component Manufacturers "old" Loading Manuals is beyond me. Surely someone else discovered this trick before I did.
I can see why they would be reluctant to do it today, because then you do not really need to buy the HIGH $$.00 Dies with the built in Micrometers. When those came on the market, I knew then someone else must have known about this all along.
I sure wasted a lot of time "Setting-Up" the Seating Stem before I figured it out.
Anyway, I hope it works as good for you as it has been working for me. Be sure the Set-Screw in your Die Lock Ring is snug and nothing is on top of the Press when you screw the Die in.
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Good hunting and clean 1-shot kills, Hot Core
Hot cores post on bullet seating struck me as a really original great post. Is there anyway of preserving this gem to stop it getting lost in the archives. I'm not quite sure how to achieve this, any ideas ?
Regards
Ray
Brilliant, I wish I'd thought of that.
Regards
Ray
Thanks Hot Core
No need to mention me when you do either, cause I still kick myself quite often for not having realized it 40 years ago.
I worked for a Genius one time and asked him if there were any tricks to being a Genius? (Asking that question was an obvious sign of NOT being one!) He told me you just take anything that is complex, find a solution for it so simple that people look at the answer and say, "Heck, I could have thought of that!!!"
He did it ALL THE TIME! I have " 1 "! HA
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Good hunting and clean 1-shot kills, Hot Core
thnaks again.....
Tried to spread your wisdom to the corners of the shooting world, only to find.
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"Of course, this is how you record settings on a Wilson that doesn't have the micrometer top."
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It was news to me too.
Regards
Ray
Hey Bill, I'll get it out to you today. It is written so a "beginner" can understand the concept, so don't think it is "talking down" to you.
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Good hunting and clean 1-shot kills, Hot Core
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No nation shall be both ignorant and free-it never was-and never will be.
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Good hunting and clean 1-shot kills, Hot Core
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deafdog@turboweb.net.au
http://deafdog.turboweb.net.au