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Rifles, Reloading, Optics, Equipment
Reloading
Bullet Sorting
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<blockquote data-quote="Bullet bumper" data-source="post: 903973" data-attributes="member: 17844"><p>If you sort several production lots as one batch you are only seperating by the things you can see and test . </p><p>If you sorted each production lot as a seperate batch then you would also be reducing variations in internal faults that may occur between different lots that you can't see and test .</p><p>The result may be slightly better consistancy but extra batchs and complication to deal with. In the end how you test and analyze the results also makes a difference to what can appear to be the best method on paper but in reality is impossible to see the difference on the target .</p><p>In the end it has to be a practical and managable system . If I bought say 1000 bullets at one time then I would sort them as a batch even if they had different lot numbers on the individual box's which usually they don't .</p><p>The one thing that has a great effect on accuracy that we can't see and test is jacket concentricity after the bullet is made , well not without expensive scientific instruments that is . </p><p>Where good bullets are concerned we are all at the mercy of the bullet jacket maker .</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Bullet bumper, post: 903973, member: 17844"] If you sort several production lots as one batch you are only seperating by the things you can see and test . If you sorted each production lot as a seperate batch then you would also be reducing variations in internal faults that may occur between different lots that you can't see and test . The result may be slightly better consistancy but extra batchs and complication to deal with. In the end how you test and analyze the results also makes a difference to what can appear to be the best method on paper but in reality is impossible to see the difference on the target . In the end it has to be a practical and managable system . If I bought say 1000 bullets at one time then I would sort them as a batch even if they had different lot numbers on the individual box's which usually they don't . The one thing that has a great effect on accuracy that we can't see and test is jacket concentricity after the bullet is made , well not without expensive scientific instruments that is . Where good bullets are concerned we are all at the mercy of the bullet jacket maker . [/QUOTE]
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