To start with, I'm brand new to reloading. In fact, I haven't reloaded a single round yet. My last two shipments of gear arrive next week.
So anyways, years ago I saw a special on Army snipers, I believe, and they showed the armory guys reloading ammunition. They were weighing the cases and bullets and putting them into lots.
So, being the tedious and technical guy that I am I got my new Chargemaster 1500 and started doing something with it. I found that 200 rounds of Sierra 168gr BTHPs had a variance in weight of 6/10th of a grain. I had one bullet that fell out of this range, and it was 167.4.
167.8 15%
167.9 20%
168.0 35%
168.1 15%
168.2 10%
168.3 5%
I also am just finding out that the length of the bullets seem to vary between 1.202 and 1.207 with the median being 1.204
Is classifying these bullets by 1/10th of grain and length going to yield any difference in accuracy. I would think that it might. Probably not at 100 or even 200, but as you start getting further out I would think the variation would start to have an effect.
But then, I know absolutely nothing about this, other than it seems slight variations over long range would begin to show up.
If not, oh well, I wasted a couple hours tonight in front of the tv.
Any help here?
Tony
So anyways, years ago I saw a special on Army snipers, I believe, and they showed the armory guys reloading ammunition. They were weighing the cases and bullets and putting them into lots.
So, being the tedious and technical guy that I am I got my new Chargemaster 1500 and started doing something with it. I found that 200 rounds of Sierra 168gr BTHPs had a variance in weight of 6/10th of a grain. I had one bullet that fell out of this range, and it was 167.4.
167.8 15%
167.9 20%
168.0 35%
168.1 15%
168.2 10%
168.3 5%
I also am just finding out that the length of the bullets seem to vary between 1.202 and 1.207 with the median being 1.204
Is classifying these bullets by 1/10th of grain and length going to yield any difference in accuracy. I would think that it might. Probably not at 100 or even 200, but as you start getting further out I would think the variation would start to have an effect.
But then, I know absolutely nothing about this, other than it seems slight variations over long range would begin to show up.
If not, oh well, I wasted a couple hours tonight in front of the tv.
Any help here?
Tony