You only need to turn the necks of your brass if your chamber is tight necked. Turning necks for standard chamered rifles can cause your brass necks to crack.
Sorting brass by weight means you should get them as close to each other as you can.
We try shooting groups with brass that is exactly the same weight.
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saeed@ emirates.net.ae
www.accuratereloading.com
I sort my 308 brass to the nearest grain. I shoot NRA, so I buy thousands of cases at a whack. This gives me several hundred per batch. The very light cases and very heavy cases get used as dummy rounds, fouling shots, or given to friends with full-auto "blasters" who don't worry about such things.
quote:
Originally posted by BB:
Do you neck turn new brass or fire form it first? How close do you sort brass by weight?
If the variance in the neck wall thickness is no more than about .0015" there is no need to neck turn and you'd get no benefit from doing so. If the brass is worse than that, get rid of it and start over again. Too much good brass is available with variances under this figure.
My approach to prepping cases is a bit different than Saeed's. What you are attempting to do in sorting brass by weight is to gain uniformity in the INTERNAL case. The case volume. Fire forming brass will alter external dimensions as well as the internal ones. The only things I do with new cases before fire forming is to uniform the primer pockets and run an expander in the case to round up the necks damaged by shipping or otherwise. AFTER fire forming I trim all cases to the shortest in the batch, uniform the flash holes, which is done after the trimming to insure consistent removal of the burrs in the interior, THEN sort by weight. Sorting before you do this will not give you uniformity of the internal volume because of differences in case length and irregularities around the flash hole.
I go one step further for cases prepped for extreme accuracy, and that is to cull cases which throw unexplained "flyers" from the group. These are marked at the range when it occurs. If they do it twice you can bet there is inconsistancy internally or in neck tension which is contributing to this. Bob
Bob338 has nailed it pretty well.
I would add the following.
If you have a very good barrel mounted on a standard unaltered action, the bedding is right and the scope and mounts are OK and the load is right, you will get about 95% of the potential accuracy.
That is, if you put that same barrel on a "trued" action and have neck turned chamber, the improvement in accuacy will be very small.
Mike