After reading a great deal on the subject of case prep, I've wondered if someone with an anal personality such as myself taking up precision hand loading is akin to someone with an addictive personality taking up cocaine snorting as a hobby - you find it difficult to find an end point. It seems like you could spend all your time prepping cases for minor increases in results. So I've decided to limit myself to the following:
1) Spend extra bucks to buy "quality" cases, i.e. Lapua
2) Prep new cases prior to fire-forming - record representative neck/base diameter, case length and base to datum line length; FL size (bump shoulder .001-.002", neck diam loaded diam minus .002"), trim to uniform case length (Wilson tool), uniform 30 degree internal chamfer (Wilson tool), de-burr externally manually; ignore primer pockets, flash hole, case weight, neck thickness and trust that the quality cases will be uniform in these areas.
3) Prime with bench tool not press
4) Weigh each powder charge
5) Use concentric seating die (Forster micrometer) with custom stem; standard COAL 2.800" with 308 SMK 175
6) Fire-form with full charges
7) Deprime;record representative neck/base diameter, case length and case to datum line length
Tumble clean with SS pins
9) Repeat (2) each cycle after adjusting bump/neck diameter post fire-forming as necessary and trim length to .002" less than measured chamber length.
10) Anneal at some frequency to be determined, probably each cycle
11) Consider segregating empty/loaded cases by weight and shoot loaded rounds in sequence (see what I mean - the original list was 10 items!)
It would seem that this procedure would yield 99.8% of potential accuracy while striking a reasonable balance between obsession and enjoyment. I'd appreciate any comments/critique/suggestions as to how to get any more out of case prep without significantly increasing the time or money spent.
Thanks,
Dave
1) Spend extra bucks to buy "quality" cases, i.e. Lapua
2) Prep new cases prior to fire-forming - record representative neck/base diameter, case length and base to datum line length; FL size (bump shoulder .001-.002", neck diam loaded diam minus .002"), trim to uniform case length (Wilson tool), uniform 30 degree internal chamfer (Wilson tool), de-burr externally manually; ignore primer pockets, flash hole, case weight, neck thickness and trust that the quality cases will be uniform in these areas.
3) Prime with bench tool not press
4) Weigh each powder charge
5) Use concentric seating die (Forster micrometer) with custom stem; standard COAL 2.800" with 308 SMK 175
6) Fire-form with full charges
7) Deprime;record representative neck/base diameter, case length and case to datum line length
Tumble clean with SS pins
9) Repeat (2) each cycle after adjusting bump/neck diameter post fire-forming as necessary and trim length to .002" less than measured chamber length.
10) Anneal at some frequency to be determined, probably each cycle
11) Consider segregating empty/loaded cases by weight and shoot loaded rounds in sequence (see what I mean - the original list was 10 items!)
It would seem that this procedure would yield 99.8% of potential accuracy while striking a reasonable balance between obsession and enjoyment. I'd appreciate any comments/critique/suggestions as to how to get any more out of case prep without significantly increasing the time or money spent.
Thanks,
Dave