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Rifles, Reloading, Optics, Equipment
Reloading
THA thing you did to your ammo to help your precision is ?
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<blockquote data-quote="7stw" data-source="post: 772411" data-attributes="member: 22854"><p>This is a good thread chase, and a lot of good info here to pick from, and learn by. Sometimes the fix is accidental, so you have to be aware of subtle changes. There are a few things in " my " process that to me, have been contributors to my accuracy standards. One tool that I use on EVERY piece of brass I own is a primer pocket Uniformer. You simply can not believe how inconsistent the primer pockets are, in mass produced brass, and even the premium brass is close to perfect, but not perfect. I have found pockets to be off square, as viewed when the cutter starts cutting. It may skip at first, until it bottoms out. Also, the cutter SQUARES the bottom of the pocket, which in turn provides a proper seat for the anvil in the primer. Sinclair has a great tool for this! Inexpensive, but priceless rewards. The key words to this game are CONSISTENCY!!!!! </p><p>One last thing to check, is runout. Runout alone has spoiled many shooters dreams of guilt edge accuracy, with everything else being the best there is. A dial indicator, and a bearing cradle is all you need. Most runout problems are a product of the resizing stage. But first you have to see where you stand with that before you go on the hunt for the cure.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="7stw, post: 772411, member: 22854"] This is a good thread chase, and a lot of good info here to pick from, and learn by. Sometimes the fix is accidental, so you have to be aware of subtle changes. There are a few things in " my " process that to me, have been contributors to my accuracy standards. One tool that I use on EVERY piece of brass I own is a primer pocket Uniformer. You simply can not believe how inconsistent the primer pockets are, in mass produced brass, and even the premium brass is close to perfect, but not perfect. I have found pockets to be off square, as viewed when the cutter starts cutting. It may skip at first, until it bottoms out. Also, the cutter SQUARES the bottom of the pocket, which in turn provides a proper seat for the anvil in the primer. Sinclair has a great tool for this! Inexpensive, but priceless rewards. The key words to this game are CONSISTENCY!!!!! One last thing to check, is runout. Runout alone has spoiled many shooters dreams of guilt edge accuracy, with everything else being the best there is. A dial indicator, and a bearing cradle is all you need. Most runout problems are a product of the resizing stage. But first you have to see where you stand with that before you go on the hunt for the cure. [/QUOTE]
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Rifles, Reloading, Optics, Equipment
Reloading
THA thing you did to your ammo to help your precision is ?
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