Mikecr
Well-Known Member
In reloading it's often assumed that 'matching' a single attribute would be beneficial, based on no more than that.
But with some matters it's actually rare that a single attribute(by itself) holds credible meaning.
Sometimes you're best to simply measure the sum of all (the result).
Case weight falls under this situation
The function of case weight comparison serves to infer case capacities, -as a shortcut to actually measuring case capacities.
It takes little effort to consider the flaw in this approach though, as you could flatten a case with a hammer and it will still weigh the same, while it's capacity has gone to zero.
We don't need to match weight, but initial confinement and chamber clearances (2 things).
These should combine to a consistent form.
With a consistent form, the expanding cases should absorb energy to consistently shape pressure peaks. This, provided the cases exhibit the same modulus of elasticity. Brass attributes aside, case form to chamber clearances plays a big role in this.
It's why new brass shoots differently than fully fire formed brass. And this difference can be far larger than ~5gr of case weight disparity -spread throughout cases. Chamber clearances change where and what your optimum developed load will be.
Initial capacity and load density is important also, but not so much variance-wise. Mix a 5gr sliver of brass to the inner perimeter of a case while charging it, will it mean anything to muzzle velocity? Not with a hunting capacity cartridge. I doubt you could pick it out with a blind test.
So if fully formed to stable dimension cases match in H20 capacity, does it reduce this dynamic clearance abstract?
Not if you FL size cases a bunch. Here, just forget any measure & matching, as you lose it with the sizing and spring backs and trimming.
If you neck size only, it matters. Your load will be different and you can shoot & see the difference.
Low clearances reduces variance, but amplifies the affect of any.
Then on the flipside, high clearances are forgiving.
I run tight to fitted clearances on everything, so I match H20 capacities after fully fire forming.
I had measured new brass thickness, while checking it's thickness variance.
Before fire forming I had dip annealed ~3/4 down case bodies.
But ultimately, if a case throws a shot, I throw the case.
I don't care about it's brand, cost, weight, capacity, or all the prep efforts. It acted differently.
What makes it act differently is just not what you could predict.
But with some matters it's actually rare that a single attribute(by itself) holds credible meaning.
Sometimes you're best to simply measure the sum of all (the result).
Case weight falls under this situation
The function of case weight comparison serves to infer case capacities, -as a shortcut to actually measuring case capacities.
It takes little effort to consider the flaw in this approach though, as you could flatten a case with a hammer and it will still weigh the same, while it's capacity has gone to zero.
We don't need to match weight, but initial confinement and chamber clearances (2 things).
These should combine to a consistent form.
With a consistent form, the expanding cases should absorb energy to consistently shape pressure peaks. This, provided the cases exhibit the same modulus of elasticity. Brass attributes aside, case form to chamber clearances plays a big role in this.
It's why new brass shoots differently than fully fire formed brass. And this difference can be far larger than ~5gr of case weight disparity -spread throughout cases. Chamber clearances change where and what your optimum developed load will be.
Initial capacity and load density is important also, but not so much variance-wise. Mix a 5gr sliver of brass to the inner perimeter of a case while charging it, will it mean anything to muzzle velocity? Not with a hunting capacity cartridge. I doubt you could pick it out with a blind test.
So if fully formed to stable dimension cases match in H20 capacity, does it reduce this dynamic clearance abstract?
Not if you FL size cases a bunch. Here, just forget any measure & matching, as you lose it with the sizing and spring backs and trimming.
If you neck size only, it matters. Your load will be different and you can shoot & see the difference.
Low clearances reduces variance, but amplifies the affect of any.
Then on the flipside, high clearances are forgiving.
I run tight to fitted clearances on everything, so I match H20 capacities after fully fire forming.
I had measured new brass thickness, while checking it's thickness variance.
Before fire forming I had dip annealed ~3/4 down case bodies.
But ultimately, if a case throws a shot, I throw the case.
I don't care about it's brand, cost, weight, capacity, or all the prep efforts. It acted differently.
What makes it act differently is just not what you could predict.