I'm aware of the plugs from sinclair, but what are any other ways to get an accurate chamber measurement for brass trimming purposes?..other than book spec
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I'm aware of the plugs from sinclair, but what are any other ways to get an accurate chamber measurement for brass trimming purposes?..other than book spec
I'll be shooting 300 win mag out of a sako trg if that helps
What is the benefit of trimming the case back to either the minimum or maximum length for your chamber? Besides being able to chamber the round of course, I am not new to reloading. Does a longer case length prevent throat wear in a magnum load? Thanks.
Rcbs precision mic, or hornady lock and load oal gauges( must use hornady modified case, seperate tool).
Im new to reloading so correct me if I'm wrong. I believe the precision mic will help preserve brass life by not overworking your brass. You can take fire formed brass from your weapon and measure it with precision mic compared to sammi specs. Then use the precision mic to help dial your resizing die slightly below fire form specs so your cases arent to short( making the brass have to work harder to fire formed specs). If you trim your cases on the minimum side of saami specs your brass has to stretch to fire formed size. Keeping the stretching to a minimum preserves case life from my understanding. Once again I'm new to the reloading world and i was just reading over the rcbs precision mic and hornady oal gauges.
The precision mic will help identify headspace and bullet seating depth to .001 accuracy from there own description. Read all instructions with the tool to fully understand what I tried to explain.
What is the benefit of trimming the case back to either the minimum or maximum length for your chamber? Besides being able to chamber the round of course, I am not new to reloading. Does a longer case length prevent throat wear in a magnum load? Thanks.
The only *crucial* need in trimming brass is to prevent the caseneck from growing long enough that it begins leading into the freebore of the chamber. If it does, it will pinch down on the bullet, hindering the freedom of the bullet to launch forward. This can cause pretty severe pressure spikes, and can be dangerous. I suspect it would also do nothing good for accuracy.
Also, per Dave Kiff at PTG, the casemouth needs to be at least .005" shy from the end of the chamber, because pressure will stretch the case forward several .001"s during firing.
Personally, I don't believe varying neck length impacts practical accuracy. I've shot many little groups with untrimmed 1x milsurp brass (prior to buying a giraud) whose length varied from 2.010" to 2.035". I suppose that for extreme accuracy applications like benchrest, it might make a tiny difference - but for field shooting conditions, I really don't think it does.
I make a slice down the neck of an easy chambering, FLS'd case.
Then I cut most of the neck off.
Seat a bullet backwards into what's left of the neck.
Slip the bit of cutoff neck onto bullet.
Chamber the dummy round, the cutoff neck will be pushed down along the bullet.
Measure casehead-to-cutoff neck.
Repeat a few times until you're satisfied your measurement is consistent.
Trim brass back at least .005" shorter than your measurement.
My Savage 308 measured ~2.045"