COL Using the Split Case Method
#11
Guest
Posts: n/a
if you are not getting good groups with the bullet seated fairly close to the lands, to try seating them deeper.
Alot of poeple Roskoe has this conception that this changes harmonics and all that, but you have also changing the load effectively. And will be increasing pressure for most powders the deeper you go.
#12
Nontypical Buck
Joined: Feb 2003
Posts: 4,647
Likes: 0
From: Pa
Now when you cut the neck of the case. How much do you cut away. Half the neck or less than half. Or do you just have to keep cutting them until you find the right cut???
#14
I'm not convinced that seating bullets near the lands does anything good for accuracy. I've played with it a bit in the past and found that its more of a waste of good bullets and gunpowder than its worth. I Use a OAL guage to figure out what my max length is so I don't mistakenly seat bullets any closer than 0.020" to the lands, I prefer farther away if possible with jacketed bulelts.
Two of my most accurate rifles: a 1903A3 likes cast bullets engraved tight into the rifling, a 1896 mauser that has so much freebore that getting a bullet anywhere near the lands would be impossible.
Two of my most accurate rifles: a 1903A3 likes cast bullets engraved tight into the rifling, a 1896 mauser that has so much freebore that getting a bullet anywhere near the lands would be impossible.
#15
Guest
Posts: n/a
I'm not convinced that seating bullets near the lands does anything good for accuracy. I've played with it a bit in the past and found that its more of a waste of good bullets and gunpowder than its worth. I Use a OAL guage to figure out what my max length is so I don't mistakenly seat bullets any closer than 0.020" to the lands, I prefer farther away if possible with jacketed bulelts.
And its no secret to any reloader that jamming in the rifling can cause you to show pressure signs way before reaching the velocity potential.
#16
Joined: Mar 2005
Posts: 426
Likes: 0
From:
If you dont have a stoney point gauge then you can take a bullet and put it in a case just enough for it to hold, color all of the bullet that isnt in the case and push the cartridge into the chamber, pull it out and if the bullet is stuck just take a peice of a cleaning rod and drop it down the barrel, re-seat the bullet to the mark the case left on the bullet when it got pushed into the case and measure the length. This usually gets your OAL length from the ogive. I sometimes do this because I dont have a OAL gauge. I usually just trim the cases to an exact length and maybe .004" shorter on accident, then I'll seat the bullet to the same length as a factory load of the same bullet weight then due to each bullet being longer or shorter I'll re set my seater die to compensate for each bullets length. That way each cartridge is the exact same length.
#18
I seat everything .030 from the lands. This almost always works well for me. If it does not work then I start fooling with seating depth. I don't reload for the pure joy of reloading like I did 35 years ago or so. Just reload because I have the stuff and its cheaper. I have never had a length guage.
#19
ORIGINAL: James B
I seat everything .030 from the lands. This almost always works well for me. If it does not work then I start fooling with seating depth.
I seat everything .030 from the lands. This almost always works well for me. If it does not work then I start fooling with seating depth.




