The Accurate Reloading Forums
Factory bullets weight variations
19 January 2018, 01:20
JiriFactory bullets weight variations
Because of this discussion (
http://forums.accuratereloadin...3621043/m/3571052191 ), I weighted at least 10 randomly selected bullets from box and found weight variations. My result are:
8 mm 196 gr Sellier Bellot SPCE - 195.2 to 196.0 gr
8 mm 196 gr Norma Oryx - 195.5 to 195.6 gr
.375 300 gr Swift A-frame - 299.5 to 300.6 gr
.45 200 gr Sierra FPJ Match - 199.6 to 200.5 gr
.45 185 gr Sierra Sportmaster - 184.5 to 185.2 gr
.45 230 gr Hornady XTP - 229.6 to 230.2 gr
.45 230 gr Hornady FMJ FP - 229.2 to 230.6 gr
.45 185 gr Speer TMJ - 183.7 to 185.6 gr
.45 230 Sellier Bellot FMJ - 229.0 to 229.9 gr
.45 200 gr Ares HC coated - 201.5 to 203 gr
.45 250 gr Ares HC coated - 248.6 to 250.0 gr
.501 400 gr Ares HC coated - 404 to 406.2 gr.
.500 400 gr Woodleigh FP - 400.1 to 401.7
I didn't weight Lehigh Defense bullets, because it make no sense.
What are your results?
Jiri
19 January 2018, 02:07
StonecreekYears ago I had a box of Norma 6.5mm FMJ's which were labeled 138.9 grains. Every one I checked came in at exactly 138.9 grains.
19 January 2018, 03:45
dpcdShows that modern bullets are more precise than they need to be for most purposes.
19 January 2018, 05:43
Saeedquote:
Originally posted by dpcd:
Shows that modern bullets are more precise than they need to be for most purposes.
Not Winchester Fail Safe!
I have had the worst bullet variation on these than any other bullets, ever.
I think we had some with a variation of up to 5 grains from a box of 270 caliber 140 grains!!!
19 January 2018, 06:53
B L O'Connorquote:
Originally posted by Saeed:
quote:
Originally posted by dpcd:
Shows that modern bullets are more precise than they need to be for most purposes.
Not Winchester Fail Safe!
I have had the worst bullet variation on these than any other bullets, ever.
I think we had some with a variation of up to 5 grains from a box of 270 caliber 140 grains!!!
Hmmmm. That might be part of the reason why Winchester stopped making them, though I suspect their high price might have played a bigger role especially if you consider that they were almost a solution for which there really wasn't much of a problem.
Having said that, I found a load or two that I'd happily use for hunting for large animals within 300 yards, which means they were ~1.5 MOA.
19 January 2018, 08:06
FjoldI had some blue Barnes, .308 cal, 180 grain bullets that varied about 2 grains up and down (4 grain spread) I talked to Barnes about them and they said that their tolerances were 2%.
Many years later I talked to a Barnes Rep about the 300 grain TSX bullets weighing in close to exactly 300 grains and he said that their tolerances "were significantly less than 0.5%"
Frank
"I don't know what there is about buffalo that frightens me so.....He looks like he hates you personally. He looks like you owe him money."
- Robert Ruark, Horn of the Hunter, 1953
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19 January 2018, 08:53
wasbeemanIn the real world of hunting and killing stuff under field conditions, how critical would a 2gr variation be? Or even +/- 5grs?
I weighed a box of Hornady 139gr 7mm bullets once. They all weighed 140gr +/- .5grs.
Aim for the exit hole
19 January 2018, 09:32
B L O'Connorquote:
Originally posted by wasbeeman:
In the real world of hunting and killing stuff under field conditions, how critical would a 2gr variation be? Or even +/- 5grs?
I weighed a box of Hornady 139gr 7mm bullets once. They all weighed 140gr +/- .5grs.
Agree. To me, and wrt the .270 140 gr. Failsafe bullets, the pertinent quality is accuracy: are they accurate enough so that I can hit a large (or especially tough) big game animal (elk, hogs, moose) where I want to up to 300 yards?
20 January 2018, 02:04
bartsche
I got the same distribution as Frank with 500 150gr. bulk bullets from Midway about 15 years ago when I sorted them.Even after sorting into 4 groups they didn't shoot much differently and that wasn't too great.

roger
Old age is a high price to pay for maturity!!! Some never pay and some pay and never reap the reward. Wisdom comes with age! Sometimes age comes alone..
20 January 2018, 17:12
RustyMan made in an imperfect world! Enough said!
Rusty
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21 January 2018, 03:30
AtkinsonYou can do those tests over and over with different boxes/lots of bullets and get a different read everytime, its a solution into a non existent problem from a hunting bullet standpoint. Same with velocity from box to box of factory loaded ammo, and lot of handloads for that matter..
As a matter of fact, we hear and read all the time if you change one component in a load, it won't shoot to your existing zero..Most of my guns shoot almost anything to the same POI, I like that..its a gun "thang" That cheap Sav. 219 Single shot 30-30 I bought last week, for instance, I can't find a load that that won't shoot in it and all to the same POI..I have a 30-30 that does the same..Its a crap shoot boys!
Ray Atkinson
Atkinson Hunting Adventures
10 Ward Lane,
Filer, Idaho, 83328
208-731-4120
rayatkinsonhunting@gmail.com