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Rifles, Reloading, Optics, Equipment
Reloading
Bumping shoulder neck sizing neck turning
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<blockquote data-quote="el matador" data-source="post: 1004379" data-attributes="member: 12193"><p>There are about a million things you can do to your gun and ammo to improve accuracy. Some of them end up helping a lot, some don't seem to make any difference. My advice would be to start off simple and see how it shoots. Get some good quality brass to begin with and you probably won't need to neck turn. Norma and Lapua brass is usually quite uniform. When reloading just use a FL resizing die and set it up so it barely bumps the shoulder back .001-.002". There are plenty of write-ups on how to do this. A good benchrest seating die is worthwhile as it keeps your ammo more concentric and allows you to easily adjust seating depth in precise increments. If you're not satisfied with your accuracy after working up your loads then you can consider neck turning, neck sizing, weighing brass, measuring concentricity, etc.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="el matador, post: 1004379, member: 12193"] There are about a million things you can do to your gun and ammo to improve accuracy. Some of them end up helping a lot, some don't seem to make any difference. My advice would be to start off simple and see how it shoots. Get some good quality brass to begin with and you probably won't need to neck turn. Norma and Lapua brass is usually quite uniform. When reloading just use a FL resizing die and set it up so it barely bumps the shoulder back .001-.002". There are plenty of write-ups on how to do this. A good benchrest seating die is worthwhile as it keeps your ammo more concentric and allows you to easily adjust seating depth in precise increments. If you're not satisfied with your accuracy after working up your loads then you can consider neck turning, neck sizing, weighing brass, measuring concentricity, etc. [/QUOTE]
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Rifles, Reloading, Optics, Equipment
Reloading
Bumping shoulder neck sizing neck turning
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