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Hunting
Extreme Long Range Hunting & Shooting (ELR)
Primer Seating Data for Extreme Long Range
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<blockquote data-quote="TK50" data-source="post: 1512137" data-attributes="member: 14088"><p>If you want to get everything you can from your long range setup you need to weigh primers. Get a lab scale that reads to at least two decimal places and will hold 2 hundredths of a grain accuracy. Do you need all of that or can you make use of it all would be a better question. I don't know for sure but it is better to have it so you can have as little variance in the final weight as far as scale accuracy as possible. Then you sort at least 300 to 500 primers at a time and batch them as close to the same weights as possible. I have done this for at least 20 plus years for my 1000 yard Benchrest ammo and also for my long range hunting ammo. You can definitely see the difference in group size if you have a gun that shoots accurately enough.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="TK50, post: 1512137, member: 14088"] If you want to get everything you can from your long range setup you need to weigh primers. Get a lab scale that reads to at least two decimal places and will hold 2 hundredths of a grain accuracy. Do you need all of that or can you make use of it all would be a better question. I don't know for sure but it is better to have it so you can have as little variance in the final weight as far as scale accuracy as possible. Then you sort at least 300 to 500 primers at a time and batch them as close to the same weights as possible. I have done this for at least 20 plus years for my 1000 yard Benchrest ammo and also for my long range hunting ammo. You can definitely see the difference in group size if you have a gun that shoots accurately enough. [/QUOTE]
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Extreme Long Range Hunting & Shooting (ELR)
Primer Seating Data for Extreme Long Range
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