How do you get consistent OAL to the ogive without putting every loaded round in a gauge and hand-adjusting it, or else pre-sorting the bullets by length to ogive and adjusting for each set?
As far as I can tell no seating die seats exactly to the ogive. Didn't think this mattered much before but: I just did a batch of .338LM using an RCBS Gold Medal seater and 250gr Lapua Scenars. I had benchmarked my lands by pushing a long dummy round into the chamber and measuring its COAL, then loaded .05" shorter. When I fired the loads the accuracy was fantastic, except that one of the rounds wouldn't chamber because the ogive hit the lands! Its COAL was the same as all the others. So obviously even with these high-grade bullets there's at least .05" variation in ogive vs. bullet length.
I've heard Redding Competition seaters bear closer to the ogive. Does it result in significantly closer ogive lengths than the RCBS GM seater? Or are there other seating dies or methods I should be looking at?
As far as I can tell no seating die seats exactly to the ogive. Didn't think this mattered much before but: I just did a batch of .338LM using an RCBS Gold Medal seater and 250gr Lapua Scenars. I had benchmarked my lands by pushing a long dummy round into the chamber and measuring its COAL, then loaded .05" shorter. When I fired the loads the accuracy was fantastic, except that one of the rounds wouldn't chamber because the ogive hit the lands! Its COAL was the same as all the others. So obviously even with these high-grade bullets there's at least .05" variation in ogive vs. bullet length.
I've heard Redding Competition seaters bear closer to the ogive. Does it result in significantly closer ogive lengths than the RCBS GM seater? Or are there other seating dies or methods I should be looking at?