Bigeclipse
Well-Known Member
- Joined
- Aug 10, 2012
- Messages
- 1,972
All,
I am not new to reloading but I am new to reloading as far as accuracy is concerned. I know certain things can have an impact on the accuracy of your load. For example, a good scale, accurate bullet seating depth can make a pretty drastic change on your accuracy. My question is, how about new unfired brass? For example, I will be buying 100 pieces of lapua brass for my wife's 7mm-08. Let's say I use 30 pieces of that unfired brand new brass to do a OCW test, then there would still be 70 pieces of factory unfired brass left. Let's say I get a good shooting load in that OCW test. How likely are the remaining 70 pieces of unfired brass loaded exactly the same to the best OCW load to get the same MOA as the OCW test? (Yes I know the OCW test is to find a stable load, but lets say for arguments sake the most stable load is .75MOA), will the remaining 70 pieces also shoot around that .75MOA mark or because these are unfired pieces of factory brass, they could change? Do I REALLY need to fire form all of the pieces of brass? I know that once these 70 pieces are used up and I go to full length resize all the pieces, things can change and I will likely need to re-run the OCW test but it will be several years of hunting before that happens. Most all of her shots have been under 200 yards anyways. She will only shoot a handful of shots out of this rifle each year.
I am not new to reloading but I am new to reloading as far as accuracy is concerned. I know certain things can have an impact on the accuracy of your load. For example, a good scale, accurate bullet seating depth can make a pretty drastic change on your accuracy. My question is, how about new unfired brass? For example, I will be buying 100 pieces of lapua brass for my wife's 7mm-08. Let's say I use 30 pieces of that unfired brand new brass to do a OCW test, then there would still be 70 pieces of factory unfired brass left. Let's say I get a good shooting load in that OCW test. How likely are the remaining 70 pieces of unfired brass loaded exactly the same to the best OCW load to get the same MOA as the OCW test? (Yes I know the OCW test is to find a stable load, but lets say for arguments sake the most stable load is .75MOA), will the remaining 70 pieces also shoot around that .75MOA mark or because these are unfired pieces of factory brass, they could change? Do I REALLY need to fire form all of the pieces of brass? I know that once these 70 pieces are used up and I go to full length resize all the pieces, things can change and I will likely need to re-run the OCW test but it will be several years of hunting before that happens. Most all of her shots have been under 200 yards anyways. She will only shoot a handful of shots out of this rifle each year.