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Rifles, Reloading, Optics, Equipment
7mm STW
Weight sorting Rem STW brass
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<blockquote data-quote="J E Custom" data-source="post: 1822350" data-attributes="member: 2736"><p>I would recommend that you do a complete case prep first before you start sorting. This includes full length sizing, trimming, flash hole prep And neck turning. This will give you the best chance of uniforming the cases and the ability to sort within 1 grain. also you wont loose/reject very many cases.</p><p></p><p>Weight sorting or volume testing is not very effective if case prep is left out. The idea is to make the cases as close to identical as possible on the outside dimensions so the sorting or volume is more consistent and predictable.</p><p></p><p>Done this way, I normally end up with 3 or 4 rejects out of 100 and I use those as seating depth gauges for different bullets, and they stay in the die set for reference.</p><p></p><p>J E CUSTOM</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="J E Custom, post: 1822350, member: 2736"] I would recommend that you do a complete case prep first before you start sorting. This includes full length sizing, trimming, flash hole prep And neck turning. This will give you the best chance of uniforming the cases and the ability to sort within 1 grain. also you wont loose/reject very many cases. Weight sorting or volume testing is not very effective if case prep is left out. The idea is to make the cases as close to identical as possible on the outside dimensions so the sorting or volume is more consistent and predictable. Done this way, I normally end up with 3 or 4 rejects out of 100 and I use those as seating depth gauges for different bullets, and they stay in the die set for reference. J E CUSTOM [/QUOTE]
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Rifles, Reloading, Optics, Equipment
7mm STW
Weight sorting Rem STW brass
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