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Rifles, Reloading, Optics, Equipment
Reloading
case weighing
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<blockquote data-quote="Centre Punch" data-source="post: 75127" data-attributes="member: 3048"><p>Hi Nelsonic,</p><p>Im not familiar with "Coyote Class" or the course of fire involved but when i shoot HV benchrest i would grade my 220 Russian cases to 1/10th of a grain, putting them in a column according to their weight. Eventually a pattern of cases at the same weight will appear and i ended up with 66 cases of the same weight out of a lot of 300 tested.</p><p>These became my match cases which i fireformed and loaded for competion.</p><p>This is a very simple operation and especially quick with a good set of digital scales but of course the quality of your brass has a lot to do with the consistancy, you did not mention which make of brass you are using.</p><p>With this amount of match cases i have been able to shoot a number of competitions with out having to re-load between relays.</p><p></p><p>Ian.</p><p></p><p>"I mean't to shoot the pike but the duck got in the way"</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Centre Punch, post: 75127, member: 3048"] Hi Nelsonic, Im not familiar with "Coyote Class" or the course of fire involved but when i shoot HV benchrest i would grade my 220 Russian cases to 1/10th of a grain, putting them in a column according to their weight. Eventually a pattern of cases at the same weight will appear and i ended up with 66 cases of the same weight out of a lot of 300 tested. These became my match cases which i fireformed and loaded for competion. This is a very simple operation and especially quick with a good set of digital scales but of course the quality of your brass has a lot to do with the consistancy, you did not mention which make of brass you are using. With this amount of match cases i have been able to shoot a number of competitions with out having to re-load between relays. Ian. "I mean't to shoot the pike but the duck got in the way" [/QUOTE]
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Rifles, Reloading, Optics, Equipment
Reloading
case weighing
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