I’m not new to reloading, nor to the Hornady OAL gauge, but last night I did something that caused me to doubt its accuracy. I took multiple measurements.
I’m setting up a couple new rifles in 6.5 Creed, never had one before. So I’m setting the CBTO for two bullet styles and it was extremely strange that at 0.030 off the lands I wasn’t even grabbing the bearing surface of the bullet with the entire neck. So, I dug in & the first thing I noticed was just how long the “rub” on the bullet was from jamming it into the lands. I had gone way past touching the lands, as evidenced by a rub that was (I’m guessing, I can go measure) around 1/8 to 3/16”.
So, obviously I wasn’t supposed to push the bullet that hard. I re-did the rest to find out where the bullet first barely touches the lands. And my COAL went from 2.878 to 2.746”. Now I was concerned. That’s a lot of variance. So I re-did the test with the gauge ten times to get an average, trying to find where I just touched the lands. Across ten tries my extreme spread was 0.287”!
I realized that the angle I held the OAL gauge body at & the amount of force applied greatly changed the results. I imagine the case isn’t properly headspaced because of this, and the bullet is allowed to touch on one side but not the other just because of the way I may/may not be tilting the gauge body. I’ve been using the OAL gauge for a few years now but doing repeated measurements to find an average has me very doubtful about the method of measurement overall. Made me worried that I may be a little too close on some of my other rifles.
Have any of you guys experienced this, or am I doing something wrong? Would be curious to see anyone’s results who tries it. I’m at a bit of a loss.