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Rifles, Reloading, Optics, Equipment
Reloading
How does brass affect accuracy?
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<blockquote data-quote="MagnumManiac" data-source="post: 2047069" data-attributes="member: 10755"><p>It's not the brass, it's how it is finished and what volume it holds across the entire LOT.</p><p>Lapua is no better in this regard than any other brand, flash holes are still punched and require chamfering. Lapua lots do differ in volume, trust me on this.</p><p>Lapua brass, ADG, Winchester are all hard, this helps get STABLE brass sooner. It also takes to annealing well.</p><p>As long as volume, which is NOT to be confused with WEIGHT, then each shot should be very very close to each other in velocity and pressure.</p><p>It is this fact alone that makes or breaks brass cases.</p><p>Sure, turning necks, case trimming and neck tension play a role, but if the combustion isn't similar, neither will the end result no matter how uniform your necks are or how deep your primer is seated.</p><p></p><p>Cheers.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="MagnumManiac, post: 2047069, member: 10755"] It’s not the brass, it’s how it is finished and what volume it holds across the entire LOT. Lapua is no better in this regard than any other brand, flash holes are still punched and require chamfering. Lapua lots do differ in volume, trust me on this. Lapua brass, ADG, Winchester are all hard, this helps get STABLE brass sooner. It also takes to annealing well. As long as volume, which is NOT to be confused with WEIGHT, then each shot should be very very close to each other in velocity and pressure. It is this fact alone that makes or breaks brass cases. Sure, turning necks, case trimming and neck tension play a role, but if the combustion isn’t similar, neither will the end result no matter how uniform your necks are or how deep your primer is seated. Cheers. [/QUOTE]
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Rifles, Reloading, Optics, Equipment
Reloading
How does brass affect accuracy?
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