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Rifles, Reloading, Optics, Equipment
Reloading
Brass weight... How important?
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<blockquote data-quote="entoptics" data-source="post: 1630016" data-attributes="member: 104268"><p>I have tens of thousands of rounds down range, and have performed a myriad of "real world testing". Other than your presumptuous dismissal of my experience, I otherwise completely agree. The devil is in the details.</p><p></p><p>The OP wasn't about ALL the details though. It was about brass weight.</p><p></p><p>IMO, after working on the problem for a number of rifles, unless your rifle is a top tier long range rig, your shooting fundamentals are outstanding, and you've addressed most of the other variables in your ammunition (concentricity, neck tension, charge weight, etc. AND the ability to measure those variables accurately), then ± a couple of grains in brass weight probably isn't worth working on just yet...</p><p></p><p>YMMV.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="entoptics, post: 1630016, member: 104268"] I have tens of thousands of rounds down range, and have performed a myriad of "real world testing". Other than your presumptuous dismissal of my experience, I otherwise completely agree. The devil is in the details. The OP wasn't about ALL the details though. It was about brass weight. IMO, after working on the problem for a number of rifles, unless your rifle is a top tier long range rig, your shooting fundamentals are outstanding, and you've addressed most of the other variables in your ammunition (concentricity, neck tension, charge weight, etc. AND the ability to measure those variables accurately), then ± a couple of grains in brass weight probably isn't worth working on just yet... YMMV. [/QUOTE]
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Rifles, Reloading, Optics, Equipment
Reloading
Brass weight... How important?
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