antelopedundee
Well-Known Member
Does a compressed charge have any springback where the seating depth changes [COL increases] over time?
It's a possibility. I personally have never had it happen and I've had some compressed loads sitting around for years with no change.Does a compressed charge have any springback where the seating depth changes [COL increases] over time?
More details please!I seated a number of rounds to the same depth, but some were apparently still too long and wouldn't chamber. I don't think it was the cases. Possible the bullets are different enough in the ogive area or the seating stem might be touching the bullet point which it shouldn't be doing. Could always back off the powder by a grain or so also. The gun appears to have a short throat.
Boom.....love me a concise accurate and no BS correct answer!short answer ....... yes.
Short answer...MAYBE.short answer ....... yes.
More details please!
What cartridge and what projectile?
It's also of note that I stopped trying to kiss the lands a long time ago, avoids all manner of potential problems in the field I've found. Same with neck-only resizing. I don't always just load to factory coal, there's sometimes a real benefit from seating longer and I have no problem with it. But if it's in a rifle that has any use other than paper punching (and i don't shoot competitively at all) I full length resize and i don't get so close to the lands that minor ogive variance or other intrinsic variables will be made manifest in a bad way
Full reliability is my number one priority. Then performance. Then accuracy. That's not to say I have no accuracy standards but for the hunting I do I'd rather have a .75 inch group with full horsepower out of a cartridge that feeds, chambers, and extracts like butter with no resistance and no risk of problems even if it gets roughed up a bit in the truck or the hike than a .3 inch group going 200 fps slower in a cartridge that's "finicky".
Does a compressed charge have any springback where the seating depth changes [COL increases] over time?