Follow along with the video below to see how to install our site as a web app on your home screen.
Note: This feature may not be available in some browsers.
We want to see your skills! Post a video between now and November 1st showing what you've learned from Frank's lessons and 3 people will be selected to win a free shirt. Good luck everyone!
Create a channel Learn moreES/SD numbers based upon 3-5 rounds are not statistically accurate nor significant. They may give you an indication of the consistency of a load, and then they may just be showing you how random chance can affect low sampling quantities. This has been discussed before here and statisticians and others who know statistical sampling know it too. Point is that those three shots or five shots may or may not reflect the reality of your load. When someone says they have single digit ES/SD numbers and then shows me a picture of three or five shots, I find it interesting but not significant or convincing.
I also do not shoot high numbers to chase low statistical data, so not being judgementel. I just wanted to shed some light onto why it can seem that people have such low ES/SD numbers when they are basing that number on a low sample quantity. It partially answers the OPs question.Hornady brass & CCI 200 primer.
I agree completely. I’m also not interested in shooting 100 rounds over a chronograph just to gather a number. I’d rather just shoot and gather dope personally but I’m just a new shooter who doesn’t know his *** from a hole in the wall.
Absolutely agree.I agree but those numbers are very impressive none the less.
That’s some really good advice about what it takes to win. Have you thought about holding a formal clinic or maybe a webinar?If you are going to be competitive with people you will never meet, you have to divide your results by 2. You also have to shoot your 600 yard groups at 200 yards, and use terms like "all day long"....and "if I do my part".
I was talking to TiborasaurusRex about it just yesterday.That’s some really good advice about what it takes to win. Have you thought about holding a formal clinic or maybe a webinar?
Now THAT'S impressive.How about a14FPS ES and a 4.2 SD over 24 rounds...
@plinkin
6.5x47...curtius custom axiom...24" hawk hill 1/8 rem varmint...which i dont care for going back to heavy palma after this barrel
JGS reamer... .293 straight neck .100 freebore
charges weighed to +or- 1 kernel on an A&D FX120i
trimmed with a giraud
full length sized/seat with whidden dies
forester coax press
primers seated with the K&M tool with the gauge
the only case prep is primer pockets uniformed with the 21st century tool
annealeez...anneal every 2nd firing
lapua brass 300 pieces per barrel
stainless tumble every time...250-300 cases at a time...1 table spoon yellow ajax 1/4 teaspoon lemi shine cold water tumble 1 hour
FL size every time...shoulder stays the same or bumped ,001... .002 neck tension....12;1 100% Isopropyl alcohol lanolin for lube
trim every time
run the primer pocket tool in the pocket every time by hand
seat primers plus .005
i seat .020 off the lands and do not chase seating depth unless im really having issues which is rare and normally a different primer(i only use 1st fed205Ms or 2nd CCI450s)or a powder adjustment will fix the issue
now with all the said i check my velocity quite often because its simple with an MPA chassis and the RAT adapter...with my last 6CM barrel and the last 6.5x47 every time i checked my speeds i was 15FPS or under with 25 rounds fired.
now like LASH says the low 3-5 shot ESs-SDs look good and are impressive but the numbers are not going to be like that every time out...yesterday i had a 60FPS ES...i shot my first 12 rounds of a match over the magneto speed...round 1 cold clean bore 2902(normally 2935-2940)...round 12 2962...which i woundnt mind from cold clean to fouled bore BUT i had a 2930 a 2935 in the mix and round 11 was 2928....these should all be 2940-2960.
i had several go just under or just over the rabbit at 611yds and 1 go off the nose of the coyote in a 1-3mph from 7oclock wind...so my first change will be switching to a CCI450 which im pretty sure will fix the high ESs.
like others have said whats most important is whats going on at the target...if i were shooting bigger targets i wouldnt worry about the numbers so much but the smaller the target the more those numbers matter.
Now THAT'S impressive.
i anneal
tumble
size...6mm soft nylon brush with graphite in the neck every 10-15 cases...when the feel of the expander pulling outta the neck feels different
trim and clean primer pockets same time
run a nylon brush in the neck on a layman prep center to remove any brass chips from trimming...ready to load
no problem...
no but im going to call john and send in some fired brass this week and have one made now that ive found the caliber im going to stick with...but then ive had great luck with the off the shelf whidden dies...what i really need to do is order a vudoo in an MPA comp chassis.
This is how you do it:
1. Shoot 3 rounds through chronograph.
2. Check and see if you have really low SD/ES
3. You probably won't, so either keep shooting 3 rounds groups until you do, or if you are running out of rounds, selectively delete individual shots from your string to get you to where you need to be.
4. Post everywhere on social media a picture of your chronograph display. Don't forget to put the obligatory "still not ready to shoot a match, but getting close" comment
I have shot 5 shot strings that showed an ES of 2 and an SD of 1. When I shot that same load for 20 rounds I had an ES of 15 and an SD of 6. These guys posting 3 or 5 shot strings with single digits ES are probably the same ones that shoot 1 or two groups in the life of their barrel that are below 1/4 MOA and then show those pictures to people for years claiming that's how their gun shoots.
Precise neck tension is the most important in my opinion. Couple thing I had to learn was that a slick layer of carbon inside the neck is a good thing and SS tumbling can have some unintended consequences on your case necks if your not paying close attention.
That is just a demonstration of how poor a measure of variability ES is and why you shouldn’t pay much attention to it. If you care about such things you should run a 20 plus shot string, and calculate a 99.9% confidence interval. It will be a much more reliable measure of the variability of your load’s velocity. It will also not be single digit, and probably not in the teens, either, which is probably why most people don’t do it. You also have to remember that the measurement lumps in the variability of your measuring device, which is not that much smaller than what you’re trying to measure.There will also be environmental conditions that are out of your control and play with your ES and SD.
I went to the range on two different days, shooting the exact same ammo that was loaded up on the same day. On Day one, the ammo had an ES of ~15 for (this is over 20+ shots). Day 2, the ammo had an ES of ~30, double of what it was before. Only difference is that there was a 20° temp difference.
Your single digit ES ammo may only be single digit on select days.
Chasing the almighty single digit ES may be a good way to test your sanity.
Can you elaborate? I havwnt found any issues with my brass from ss tumbling. What have you seen?
Can you elaborate? I havwnt found any issues with my brass from ss tumbling. What have you seen?