I've come to terms with me being a little ocd...but was thinking while weighing out my .300 wm brass to the .1 gr, is this really making a difference?
I'm sure the actual volume of the case has a direct correlation with internal pressure and thus, velocity and performance. But does a Nosler case at 250.0 gr vs a Nosler case of the same vintage at 251.0 gr have a significant enough impact that I should spend the time weighing and sorting these cases?
I highly doubt I'll see any difference at 100 yards...or even 200 or 300, perhaps past that, but how much?
Also, I saw a LEE kit that used "scoops" of varying volume to measure loads...I grabbed one just to check it out, and the same scoop - even being as careful as possible, varied by 1 gr or more from scoop to scoop...and to that point, the =/- .1 gr per projectile in a box of 100 175 SMKs...
I really enjoy reloading, but am wondering if I'm spending too much time on the bench to get unnecessary improvements...If I could get 95% performance cutting out a few steps that are taking 2-3x's as long it'd be a nice change...
I'm sure the actual volume of the case has a direct correlation with internal pressure and thus, velocity and performance. But does a Nosler case at 250.0 gr vs a Nosler case of the same vintage at 251.0 gr have a significant enough impact that I should spend the time weighing and sorting these cases?
I highly doubt I'll see any difference at 100 yards...or even 200 or 300, perhaps past that, but how much?
Also, I saw a LEE kit that used "scoops" of varying volume to measure loads...I grabbed one just to check it out, and the same scoop - even being as careful as possible, varied by 1 gr or more from scoop to scoop...and to that point, the =/- .1 gr per projectile in a box of 100 175 SMKs...
I really enjoy reloading, but am wondering if I'm spending too much time on the bench to get unnecessary improvements...If I could get 95% performance cutting out a few steps that are taking 2-3x's as long it'd be a nice change...