I'm looking at getting a concentricity gauge and I'm wondering how important they are? Also what kind do you use?
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You can also check consistency in your equipment and reloading procedure with it to some degree, and it will tell you if something is off.
I'm looking at getting a concentricity gauge and I'm wondering how important they are? Also what kind do you use?
Could you explain why? It may be most helpful.. . . . Dont get the hornandy one, I dont like it at all. . . .
For $hits & giggles I examined a box (20) of .308 FGMM 168 grain ammo.
It was appalling how much runout there was. as much as .009" TIR (total indicator reading) which is in fact only .0045" eccentric.
Despite that, the ammo grouped pretty well, averaging .8 MOA (5 shot groups, 100 yards.
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Could you explain why? It may be most helpful.
Could you explain why? It may be most helpful.
I had the Hornady one and sold it after I realized that you could only check loaded ammo and then found out that pressing on the bullet to remedy a concentricity problem probably causes more issues than it fixes. Hornady hangs their hat on this feature which no other concentricity gauge offers, for good reason.You can only check runout in a case that has a bullet seated in it, you cannot check runout through your sizing process. Like above I could never get the two to line up, and I trust my Sinclair one. Also it's not advisable to try and "fix" runout by pressing on one side of the case for obvious case tension problems.