It's much better to sort your 'stamps to maker, especially if you are loading at anything over start charges. Case capacity changes, and will change your pressures/ velocity/ downrangs poi. For 100 yards and start charges it probably will not matter much, but much further out and it sure will.Is it ok to mix brass?
One example is with .223 brass for an AR loaded at minimal velocity.
The other is for an '06, .270
It's much better to sort your 'stamps to maker, especially if you are loading at anything over start charges. Case capacity changes, and will change your pressures/ velocity/ downrangs poi. For 100 yards and start charges it probably will not matter much, but much further out and it sure will.
keep em for that unforseen" hey, I've got twenty bullets left(of a box I don't really like), let's go shoot some pop cans" type of load. Brass is spendy and you may end up with more of that brass later on anyway. We kept 223 for years, then threw them away when we moved years ago. It would have saved me a couple of hundred $ keeping the brass.Ok. That is what I was thinking. I'm new to reloading and am trying to get things organized.
I've been saving my brass, but noticed that some of them are just a few Feds/PMC brass then a bunch of Rems.
So am I better off not using them? Sounds like a lot of work keeping them and working them up separate than just getting a bulk amount of the brass that a recipe calls out for?
I should just wait for my reloading book to arrive, but I had to ask.