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Rifles, Reloading, Optics, Equipment
Reloading
Bullet Jump/Jammed - Is it the Bullet design or the rifle
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<blockquote data-quote="asd9055" data-source="post: 1984250" data-attributes="member: 73445"><p>Dragoon,</p><p>Thank you for taking the time for a thoughtful response. I am an engineer as well, and I don't have to run my own experiment to accept the results, however I usually try to understand why.</p><p>So in your experience, if you were to shoot a different 300 grn bullets, one that is of tangent design and one that is of secant design, would the 0.010" of the lands shoot the same? </p><p>I believe in the articles on bullet jump, Mark suggests looking for the most "forgiving" bullet jump to allow for throat erosion down the road. For the OTM in your case it might be 0.010" of the lands which would mean bullet design might be the biggest factor. That is what I am trying to determine. I don't have the answers, was looking for people who tried different bullets in the same rifle and see what they experience</p><p>Again, thank you</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="asd9055, post: 1984250, member: 73445"] Dragoon, Thank you for taking the time for a thoughtful response. I am an engineer as well, and I don't have to run my own experiment to accept the results, however I usually try to understand why. So in your experience, if you were to shoot a different 300 grn bullets, one that is of tangent design and one that is of secant design, would the 0.010" of the lands shoot the same? I believe in the articles on bullet jump, Mark suggests looking for the most "forgiving" bullet jump to allow for throat erosion down the road. For the OTM in your case it might be 0.010" of the lands which would mean bullet design might be the biggest factor. That is what I am trying to determine. I don't have the answers, was looking for people who tried different bullets in the same rifle and see what they experience Again, thank you [/QUOTE]
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Reloading
Bullet Jump/Jammed - Is it the Bullet design or the rifle
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