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Rifles, Reloading, Optics, Equipment
Reloading
Would this be fair to say?
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<blockquote data-quote="MagnumManiac" data-source="post: 2778209" data-attributes="member: 10755"><p>Jam is NOT the be all and end all of seating depth.</p><p>BR shooters use different chambers and different bullets in comparison to F-Class shooters. Chamber design influences seating depth just as much as bullet type.</p><p>Rarely have I mentioned on here exactly which bullets for competition I'm using, but I will tell you that I never jam because I never find it to make much difference to my aggregate scores. When I'm shooting strings of 50-80 bullets, I don't care that a jam resulted in a few very tight groups while the load that was .010" off produced 1/4 MoA every time it was shot…which is gonna be used?!</p><p>Yes secant ogive is different to tangent, but the seating depth is still what is most important, tuning after this with powder and primers is rarely the deal breaker.</p><p>Anyway, I'll let you believe that jam is king.</p><p></p><p>Cheers.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="MagnumManiac, post: 2778209, member: 10755"] Jam is NOT the be all and end all of seating depth. BR shooters use different chambers and different bullets in comparison to F-Class shooters. Chamber design influences seating depth just as much as bullet type. Rarely have I mentioned on here exactly which bullets for competition I’m using, but I will tell you that I never jam because I never find it to make much difference to my aggregate scores. When I’m shooting strings of 50-80 bullets, I don’t care that a jam resulted in a few very tight groups while the load that was .010” off produced 1/4 MoA every time it was shot…which is gonna be used?! Yes secant ogive is different to tangent, but the seating depth is still what is most important, tuning after this with powder and primers is rarely the deal breaker. Anyway, I’ll let you believe that jam is king. Cheers. [/QUOTE]
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Rifles, Reloading, Optics, Equipment
Reloading
Would this be fair to say?
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