I have been trying to get my es lower for my .338 edge, I have not been below 34. My brass prep includes doing the primer pockets, flash hole deburring, very precise powder weighing, sorted and weigh bullets,chamber and debur by hand, trimmed and squared cases, dry graphite before seating the bullet. Just wondering if someone has any tips to get it lowere thanks
In my understanding, and I got this from several GOOD benchrest shooters, the bearing length of the bullet is more important than the weight of the bullet. I guess you could do both, but that would probably end up being a very small group of bullets. I measure the bearing length with a combination of the Sinclair Bullet Sorting Stand
SINCLAIR BULLET SORTING STAND | Sinclair Intl and bullet comparators from David Tubb
BSC insert .224 cal - BSC by Superior Shooting Systems . One of the two pieces in this set attaches to the stem of the dial indicator. In this way, you can measure the actual bearing length from the boattail to the Ogive.
Some other ideas which I use but have no proof they improve groups is to skim the necks (or you can actually turn them) which is supposed to even out the way that the case holds the bullet. Another idea is to anneal every other firing (I am expecting my Giraud in two weeks)
New Page 1 . I trim meplats and then repoint my bullets
Precision Reloading Equipment I coat my bullets with Boron Nitride from David Tubb
Boron Nitride Coating Bullets - David Tubb
Another question is whether you can actually trust the ES measurements you are getting. I had an inexpensive Chronograph (~$150) and the eratic numbers I was getting were driving me nuts. I finally bit the bullet (pardon the pun) and got the industry standard Oehler 35P
Oehler Research, Inc.--Model 35 Proof Chronograph I sort my brass in 0.1gn lots to indirectly control the volume of the case. Some claim that it is necessary to directly measure the volume using water. It is important to use cases with equal volume because that affects the amount of pressure generated which directly affects bullet velocity. Then a BIG part of lowering your ES is your load development and seating depth. I start with .5gn steps, measured to a single kernel of Varget with a Sartorius Magnetic Force Restoration scale
Sartorius GD503-NTEP Class II legal for trade Carat Scale (which with the help of this website, I have modified to read in grains-- it is accurate to .005gn) and shoot 10 rounds at each step. Once I finish that, I vary the seating depth (make sure you do not jam the bullet in the lands if your load is anywhere near max or you could end up with a KaBoom!) Then I go back and fine tune the charge by varying the amount of powder in .1gn steps centered on the number I determined on the first coarse step. I am not sure which should be done first, determine load or seating depth, I can see advantages of each and it seems to be an iterative process since each affects the other one.
Then there is concentricity. Many question the value of adjusting this; however, it IS one thing you can control and I have CDO, which is the same as OCD, but the letters are in alphabetical order, as they should be. There are several tools out there to measure concentricity, I own three of them, but the one I like best is the Hornady model since it is the only one I have found that has a built in way to correct small concentricity problems. Of course, having a good press and good loading dies is the way you start having good concentricity. That's a data dump of everything I know about reducing ES. So far my best for 10 is an ES of 13 with an SD of 6, but I will not be happy with them until I get the ES in single digits.
Warning: This is not a cheap hobby as you may already be aware. The equipment I mentioned above comes to roughly $3K+, and that doesn't begin to include your press, dies, ammo components, rifle, optics, other reloading related measurement devices, other brass prep tools, shooting accessories, or gunsmithing services. Maybe it would be less expensive if I just took up drugs (probably less addicting too.)