Re: Concentricity Problems
<div class="ubbcode-block"><div class="ubbcode-header">Originally Posted By: sobrbiker883</div><div class="ubbcode-body">What kind of accuracy are you getting with the stuff you've been loading so far?
Personally, I roll a round on a mirror and if it visibly wobbles it goes in a fouler/sighter pile.
Unlike many, I do not enjoy reloading, I reload because I enjoy shooting, so I've cut down on the processes that in my case really don't make much difference. If I knew I could shoot the difference between .004 and .006 runout, I would worry about it, but I know I couldn't.
It seems from reading some of your posts that you are trying to get benchrest rounds from a Dillon, and all I can say is if that were practical that's how all the benchrest guys would load. Especially if you are trying to size, trim, prime, charge and seat in a production manner.
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I haven't shot any of the rounds loaded on the Dillon yet, just got the press about a month ago and am still working on these issues I've had. I'm not really trying to get benchrest quality rounds, but I want to get them as good as I can at a high volume in as short amount of time as I can. If I can cut down concentricity by half with a new comp seater for example that would be worth it to me. However as others have pointed out I may not even notice a differnce with standard chambers. I am still trying to improve though so I can know how to make my .308 rounds as accurate as possible for my precision rifles. Also it brings some satisfaction to know that I can make potentially accurate ammo even if my rifle can't tell the difference.