I'm hoping for some insight on my situation involving my 6.5x47 Lapua and some really nasty 100 meter groups.
Long story short, I used the round-robin technique to build a very accurate load with virgin Lapua brass, CCI primers, H4350, and 142 SMKs. The only brass prep I did was a very light neck-turn (50%) and a final neck sizing with my Redding bushing die. 41.8 grains of H4350 produces 5-shot groups that are a consistently in the 0.3s and 0.4s @ 100 meters. If my camera was running, I'd post a half dozen examples of this.
Today I went to the range to confirm my bullet drops at longer distances, but discovered my 100 meters groups looked like garbage. I was averaging around 1 inch!
The only difference between then and now is the fact that my Lapua brass is now once-fired. The recipe and components are exactly the same. The brass was simply cleaned, and neck-sized with the same bushing used the first time around.
So it seems obvious I have disrupted my tuned load, and the only factor that stands out to me is shoulder position. I did note that my these once-fired rounds were just bit harder to chamber.
What does this mean? Should I go back and bump the shoulders on my once-fired brass back to the same place as my virgin brass? Or does this mean that I need to conduct a new load development on this once-fired brass?
I'm really frustrated to find the shoulder position changes things so dramatically. I've always read that neck-sized, once-fired brass is better because it is fitted to the chamber. Is my experience normal? Am I missing anything else?
I'm really considering dumping the neck-sizing only philosophy and going with a full-length sizing strategy.
Any opinions would be appreciated.
Thanks
Long story short, I used the round-robin technique to build a very accurate load with virgin Lapua brass, CCI primers, H4350, and 142 SMKs. The only brass prep I did was a very light neck-turn (50%) and a final neck sizing with my Redding bushing die. 41.8 grains of H4350 produces 5-shot groups that are a consistently in the 0.3s and 0.4s @ 100 meters. If my camera was running, I'd post a half dozen examples of this.
Today I went to the range to confirm my bullet drops at longer distances, but discovered my 100 meters groups looked like garbage. I was averaging around 1 inch!
The only difference between then and now is the fact that my Lapua brass is now once-fired. The recipe and components are exactly the same. The brass was simply cleaned, and neck-sized with the same bushing used the first time around.
So it seems obvious I have disrupted my tuned load, and the only factor that stands out to me is shoulder position. I did note that my these once-fired rounds were just bit harder to chamber.
What does this mean? Should I go back and bump the shoulders on my once-fired brass back to the same place as my virgin brass? Or does this mean that I need to conduct a new load development on this once-fired brass?
I'm really frustrated to find the shoulder position changes things so dramatically. I've always read that neck-sized, once-fired brass is better because it is fitted to the chamber. Is my experience normal? Am I missing anything else?
I'm really considering dumping the neck-sizing only philosophy and going with a full-length sizing strategy.
Any opinions would be appreciated.
Thanks