I am new to long range shooting and bought some inexpensive ammo to try out a new gun I bought. If all goes well, I'll be at the range this Saturday for the first time with this rifle.
As far as ammo goes, I bought a box of Winchester Super X and another of Remington Core Lockt to break-in the barrel, sighting, etc. When looking at the bullet tip which is lead sticking out of some type of copper alloy, they seem very inconsistent from bullet to bullet within their respective box. So I started wondering how much impact on accuracy, not expecting much out of this ammo, does the tip of the bullet have in itself? I realize there are about a 1000 and 1 different variables, but it seems like it would be easy to clean this up, hell, a pencil sharpener would do a better job than the way they come from the box. it would seem that at a minimum, they would be better of cutting the tip flat as is done in the match quality air ammo I shoot.
I hear about people turning bullets on a lathe and having a CNC as well as manual lathe, I can see where one could get carried away with making or tweaking bullets.
So to restate the question, can you make a significant improvement to low-price ammo by turning the bullet tip? I'm not suggesting I would spend the time, just curious.
Thanks,
Jerry
As far as ammo goes, I bought a box of Winchester Super X and another of Remington Core Lockt to break-in the barrel, sighting, etc. When looking at the bullet tip which is lead sticking out of some type of copper alloy, they seem very inconsistent from bullet to bullet within their respective box. So I started wondering how much impact on accuracy, not expecting much out of this ammo, does the tip of the bullet have in itself? I realize there are about a 1000 and 1 different variables, but it seems like it would be easy to clean this up, hell, a pencil sharpener would do a better job than the way they come from the box. it would seem that at a minimum, they would be better of cutting the tip flat as is done in the match quality air ammo I shoot.
I hear about people turning bullets on a lathe and having a CNC as well as manual lathe, I can see where one could get carried away with making or tweaking bullets.
So to restate the question, can you make a significant improvement to low-price ammo by turning the bullet tip? I'm not suggesting I would spend the time, just curious.
Thanks,
Jerry