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Long Range Hunting & Shooting
Brass Prep for long range accuracy
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<blockquote data-quote="MarshMello" data-source="post: 1711364" data-attributes="member: 67621"><p>I am in the camp of the "least amount of prep to get acceptable, results with reasonable brass life". Notice that is a completely subjective statement. IMO, the most important aspect of whatever you choose to do is repeatable consistency. I personally don't neck size anymore. I like knowing my round will always chamber (competition and hunting). I ultrasonic, anneal, FL size with bushing, .002 shoulder bump, trim/deburr chamfer in one step (thank you Giraud!), prime, load and shoot. I am satisfied with consistent .5 moa for my needs and the effort/time expended. Really my definition of the best way is what meets your needs with results that are acceptable. Where that point of diminishing returns is totally up to you. 5" group at 1000'? Totally acceptable in my book. That .5 MOA and would be a day that met my expectations.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="MarshMello, post: 1711364, member: 67621"] I am in the camp of the "least amount of prep to get acceptable, results with reasonable brass life". Notice that is a completely subjective statement. IMO, the most important aspect of whatever you choose to do is repeatable consistency. I personally don't neck size anymore. I like knowing my round will always chamber (competition and hunting). I ultrasonic, anneal, FL size with bushing, .002 shoulder bump, trim/deburr chamfer in one step (thank you Giraud!), prime, load and shoot. I am satisfied with consistent .5 moa for my needs and the effort/time expended. Really my definition of the best way is what meets your needs with results that are acceptable. Where that point of diminishing returns is totally up to you. 5" group at 1000'? Totally acceptable in my book. That .5 MOA and would be a day that met my expectations. [/QUOTE]
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Brass Prep for long range accuracy
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