Is there a benifit to finding the lands with an OAL guage? What does it do, compared to just seating a bullet long and pushing it into the chamber?
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Join the contest SubscribeI like bergers, and they make plenty of hybrid ogives which jump just fine.If you are referring to a Hornady (or Possum Hollow) OAL gauge then that is the easiest way to find "jam" in my mind. There are other tools or techniques that will do the same thing but are different (Sinclair is an example).
There is a learning curve using the tools but that just my explanation. I typically will measure 3 bullets from a particular lot a couple times each. It doesn't take a lot of time as everything is set out and ready to be used with a notebook in hand...
Unlike Supersubes, I don't mind using a Berger VLD (I'll assume that was an example of a bullet he was referring to). That said, I rarely even bother with a VLD in an AR rifle as there a better and easier options for that IMHO. For my boltguns, a VLD bullet will always be available for use.
To clarify. I’m asking why one needs to buy a tool to find the lands. Some people find it by seating a bullet long in a dummy round and chambering it. Why spend money on a tool when there’s simple and free method?Jamming causes pressure spikes, it can affect velocity spreads negatively, and it takes effort. In some combos(light neck tension) the throat will hang on to the bullet when you extract a live round and stop the gun due to bore obstruction and powder spilled everywhere. Even when jamming it would wise to know exactly how much you're jamming, which would necessitate finding the “touching” OAL with a tool/method anyway.
Some guys like to jam, and some bullets prefer it. Its up to you to test it. If I had a bullet type that wanted to be jammed, I’d switch bullets.
If you think stripping your bolt down and doing incremental seating a bit deeper to find seating depth where the bolt handle just drops (which I believe is best how to do this vice just jamming a bullet into the lands and pushing it back into the case) to be more simple, go for it.To clarify. I’m asking why one needs to buy a tool to find the lands. Some people find it by seating a bullet long in a dummy round and chambering it. Why spend money on a tool when there’s simple and free method?
I was taking a shot in the dark of what bullets prefer a jam that you might have been referring to. VLD's can jump but jamming works every time for me. I agree completely about jumping hybrids. I can jam a hybrid and they work great but ran out of magazine length in a 6.5 Creedmoor that has an Obermeyer barrel and now jump them a contry mile and the groups are just as good.I like bergers, and they make plenty of hybrid ogives which jump just fine.
No reason you can't do it that way. If you also like to know your measurements in an AR, that technique becomes more problematic.To clarify. I’m asking why one needs to buy a tool to find the lands. Some people find it by seating a bullet long in a dummy round and chambering it. Why spend money on a tool when there’s simple and free method?
I see now. The answer is simple, tools are way faster and simpler. I use a sinclair tool.To clarify. I’m asking why one needs to buy a tool to find the lands. Some people find it by seating a bullet long in a dummy round and chambering it. Why spend money on a tool when there’s simple and free method?
Its all good man. I had my day with VLD’s, both Berger and JLK. Still have thousands of the JLK’s. Im pretty much to the point where i dont do seating depth tests at all, and I can get away with that using tolerant bullets.I was taking a shot in the dark of what bullets prefer a jam that you might have been referring to. VLD's can jump but jamming works every time for me. I agree completely about jumping hybrids. I can jam a hybrid and they work great but ran out of magazine length in a 6.5 Creedmoor that has an Obermeyer barrel and now jump them a contry mile and the groups are just as good.
I got caught in the "assume" trap but the ass was just me.
Depends on your idea of simple or free.... having options and choices is better than no choices....To clarify. I’m asking why one needs to buy a tool to find the lands. Some people find it by seating a bullet long in a dummy round and chambering it. Why spend money on a tool when there’s simple and free method?
Because bullets stick in the throat, pull back out of the case a little or completely when extracting it and give you numbers that aren't right. You can sort of do it blackening/bluing the bullet to leave witness mark of it's deepest seating, but even that is iffy and a pain in the butt.To clarify. I’m asking why one needs to buy a tool to find the lands. Some people find it by seating a bullet long in a dummy round and chambering it. Why spend money on a tool when there’s simple and free method?
This is the best answer to the op question. We’ve all done the partial size or split neck and sharpie methods. The OAL gauges make this process simple and consistent vs the old methods.Because bullets stick in the throat, pull back out of the case a little or completely when extracting it and give you numbers that aren't right. You can sort of do it blackening/bluing the bullet to leave witness mark of it's deepest seating, but even that is iffy and a pain in the butt.
I used all kinds of crazy methods years ago, and the the tools on the market now are miles better and Hornady one is dirt cheap for the headaches it saves.
Heh?the bolt wont fall
Heh?
I really shouldn't have quoted just that since I don't understand most of what you wrote.
And if it doesn't have a bolt?![]()
Swing and a miss, as usual . Give credit where credit is due...Just like Alex did .Wheeler method. Scroll down to the finding lands video. Pretty much impossible for the lands to grab the bullet at the touch point and move it.
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I found that after a bit of practice, I got very consistent results and any outliers from errors in my using it are very apparent in a series of measurements.You can do the same thing with a barrel held vertical and gravity. The "Speedy" method. No bolt required.
You can also do the "Cortina" method with lube/wax on bullet and chamber it long and use your bolt action bolt or your bolt carrier to send it into the rifling. The lube/wax will almost always keep it from sticking. Then you just back off .020 and now you're in the rifling pretty much as far as you can go without sticking a bullet (you found the stick point with the lube, and backed off). Still in the lands, but not going to stick the bullet.
And of course you can use OAL gauges and modified cases. Which are pretty hard to get exact measurements with since you can push a bullet .005 or more into rifling with very little pressure from your fingers.
Then there's tools like the Sinclair. Methods like using a dowel/rod and bullet.....etc, etc, etc.
As @RegionRat stated above, knowing as many of the methods as possible and their shortcomings is the best course of action. None of them are inherently better than the other overall. There may be a better method/s for your individual situations.....but almost never a one size fits all.
I started doing the blank dummy round and then backing it off .002-.003. Haven't had a chance to try the rounds.To clarify. I’m asking why one needs to buy a tool to find the lands. Some people find it by seating a bullet long in a dummy round and chambering it. Why spend money on a tool when there’s simple and free method?