Muir,
Good call on the reading - I will try to find a copy... but by the sound of it I will be lucky... back the internet!
I see where you are coming from - but I remember clearly when I started reloading - Lyman press, RCBS dies, lyman lube pad, reloading block.
I guess you and I both reload for comps? I use redding S dies so I can alter neck tension. I spend very good money on my ' case prep' gadgets & 'measuring kit', and try to work to as higher degee of accuracy as possible. Most hunters have teh basic kit that gives them a good level of accuracy - but does not account for neck tension, neck concentricity, case concentricity, etc. Most hunters I know don't bother spending the cash on a Primer pocket uniformer, or flash hole deburrer. Powder qty by weight is about the only thing that one can tinker with to get better results, other than seating depth, and even this is often hit and miss because the cheaper dies ( at least least the Lee and Lyman dies I once used) tend not to give 'even' seating depths. You have to measure each and every round (with a comparitor) and pull poor ones!
I tend to agree that +/- 1/10th grain (ie 0.2grain total ) is often neither here nor there for the majority of hutning rifles - but my old 243 would not take being more that 3/10th's gr out for a group to open from <1/2" to >1".
I would always burn the extra powder to see if the result improve!
Cheers
Chops
(PS, Muir - sorry if my last post sounded stroppy - just got home from hospital following my wife giving birth to our 2nd nipper!!! Goodbye dreams of a 7mmBooBoo F-Class special!!!)
Good call on the reading - I will try to find a copy... but by the sound of it I will be lucky... back the internet!
a standard hunting rifle in good shape, there are a lot more things to worry about than a tenth of a grain of powder: especially if the other items mentioned are ignored or neglected.
I see where you are coming from - but I remember clearly when I started reloading - Lyman press, RCBS dies, lyman lube pad, reloading block.
I guess you and I both reload for comps? I use redding S dies so I can alter neck tension. I spend very good money on my ' case prep' gadgets & 'measuring kit', and try to work to as higher degee of accuracy as possible. Most hunters have teh basic kit that gives them a good level of accuracy - but does not account for neck tension, neck concentricity, case concentricity, etc. Most hunters I know don't bother spending the cash on a Primer pocket uniformer, or flash hole deburrer. Powder qty by weight is about the only thing that one can tinker with to get better results, other than seating depth, and even this is often hit and miss because the cheaper dies ( at least least the Lee and Lyman dies I once used) tend not to give 'even' seating depths. You have to measure each and every round (with a comparitor) and pull poor ones!
I tend to agree that +/- 1/10th grain (ie 0.2grain total ) is often neither here nor there for the majority of hutning rifles - but my old 243 would not take being more that 3/10th's gr out for a group to open from <1/2" to >1".
I would always burn the extra powder to see if the result improve!
Cheers
Chops
(PS, Muir - sorry if my last post sounded stroppy - just got home from hospital following my wife giving birth to our 2nd nipper!!! Goodbye dreams of a 7mmBooBoo F-Class special!!!)