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Rifles, Reloading, Optics, Equipment
Reloading
Brass weight... How important?
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<blockquote data-quote="Silly_Ghillie" data-source="post: 1629658" data-attributes="member: 107271"><p>Oh my, this can of worms is going to explode any day now with endless suppositions and conjectures about case volume versus brass density versus the chemical composition of the shooters toe jam and how long he or she brushes their teeth. With that said, allow me to join the whir. lol. </p><p></p><p>I typically cull anything outside of 1% of my average grain. if I have enough that falls within the same grain, I will cull anything outside of that weight class. I have seen people use mixed brass and get an SD of 8 and ES of 15. so its hard to say, but for what its worth, I think its a good way to "roughly" determine internal case consistency as far as volume is concerned. I have had good luck with my method so far and I have used it for many years now with some amount of consistency.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Silly_Ghillie, post: 1629658, member: 107271"] Oh my, this can of worms is going to explode any day now with endless suppositions and conjectures about case volume versus brass density versus the chemical composition of the shooters toe jam and how long he or she brushes their teeth. With that said, allow me to join the whir. lol. I typically cull anything outside of 1% of my average grain. if I have enough that falls within the same grain, I will cull anything outside of that weight class. I have seen people use mixed brass and get an SD of 8 and ES of 15. so its hard to say, but for what its worth, I think its a good way to "roughly" determine internal case consistency as far as volume is concerned. I have had good luck with my method so far and I have used it for many years now with some amount of consistency. [/QUOTE]
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Rifles, Reloading, Optics, Equipment
Reloading
Brass weight... How important?
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