I think I know the answer to this, but would like to call upon the experience of others to solve it definitively.
I typically use a Stoney Point comparator to determine the max COAL (touching) for a particular bullet/rifle combination and then back off .020 for jump. This measurement will vary somewhat depending on bullet style. I'm thinking that this is due to the fact that the comparator insert is measuring on a point that is not exactly the same as the land dimensions (.295 comp vs .300 lands), so any variation in ogive profile ahead or behind that line affects the measurement.
If I had a comparator insert that matched the land diameter, should all of my comparator measurements on that particular rifle be the same regardless of the brand or style of bullet?
Thanks<script type="text/javascript" src="safari-extension://com.ebay.safari.myebaymanager-QYHMMGCMJR/1d20eafd/background/helpers/prefilterHelper.js"></script>
I typically use a Stoney Point comparator to determine the max COAL (touching) for a particular bullet/rifle combination and then back off .020 for jump. This measurement will vary somewhat depending on bullet style. I'm thinking that this is due to the fact that the comparator insert is measuring on a point that is not exactly the same as the land dimensions (.295 comp vs .300 lands), so any variation in ogive profile ahead or behind that line affects the measurement.
If I had a comparator insert that matched the land diameter, should all of my comparator measurements on that particular rifle be the same regardless of the brand or style of bullet?
Thanks<script type="text/javascript" src="safari-extension://com.ebay.safari.myebaymanager-QYHMMGCMJR/1d20eafd/background/helpers/prefilterHelper.js"></script>