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- Nov 7, 2018
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Man talk about shitting up a thread trying to prove how smart you are
Good ol’ D measuring contest
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Man talk about shitting up a thread trying to prove how smart you are
I don’t know where you live, but if you’re anywhere near Coburg, Oregon, I’d be happy to show you how I do it. I’m sure there are many with much better skills than I have, but I like to think I do okay.
P
How do you like the Canon PowerShot G12? That is some serious dedication to use a stand alone camera for that kind of picture. Granted back in 2011 cell phone cameras sucked. Going to the length of using Lightroom to process the pictures is some dedication, even in 2011 though. By the way, 3.6 is pretty out of date, how old is that Mac you are running it on? How's the processing speed?
Just buy a TAC OPSDon’t currently have any 6.5 dies. I sold every piece of reloading stuff I owned (likely $2-3k worth) because I was so frustrated with reloading lol
I don’t want to spend a lot of money on reloading gear/components but if let’s say Lapua brass is worth it, I have no problem spending the money on certain items to hopefully speed my reloading learn curve up. Trying to spend money where I should and not blow it on tools/components that will lead to minimal increases in accuracy.
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Original topic? Seriously, you might as well be talking photography on this thread.@BigStick I value your experience, and riddles. Please don't get banned.
Back to original topic, regarding controlling headspace, what are your thoughts on using a dedicated mandrel die from the top, rather than pulling a button from the bottom. Could inconsistent ID neck lube lead to a button/ball on a size die pulling headspace?
So long story short I’m coming to realize that I caused my own frustrations with reloading. Small shot count groups, changing .2-.3 grains per group, changing seating depth etc. on top of that, other than the 22-250, I was reloading for picky guns
Changing incremental powder charges is good technique; changing seating depth is also good technique. Thing is you want to find the right powder charge and then dick with the seating depth. That said, OP is a hunter at heart not a paper puncher. Shooting Minute of Deer (4~5 MOA) should be doable with minimal trial and error. There are good indicators as to which powder might be right for your situation.No doubt about it, that can be frustrating. The handloading philosophy that with a lot of work you’ll find a good shooting load for that rifle, is both right and wrong. A lot of what’s written gives false hope, and even a load that seems to shoot well can be right on the edge of not being worth a darn and slight differences in temperature, or components makes it go to crap. It‘s frustrating seeing many others shooting small groups and everything you try is not working out.
It’s also human nature to want to show others extra small groups - guys in every form of shooting have always done this, and it’s not what any of those guns does on a consistent basis.
I can say without a doubt that if the accuracy you’d be happy with is keeping 10 shots in 1 moa, you don’t need a chronograph, or fancy brass, or anything other than a basic setup, but you do need an accurate rifle, good shooting technique and good range conditions.
If the first ten shots out of gun wont shoot 1 moa, the next 100 wont either. Factory loads can be very good, on an average rifle you may not be able to get more accuracy out of reloads.
Focus on the powder, the bullet and the barrel - if you don’t reload that changes to brand of cartridge and barrel. Save up and get a good barrel, way before a chronograph, or wasting $200 in components to determine a rifle won’t shoot.
I‘d say get an accurate barrel before reloading equipment.
In factory guns I used to have an old beat up 243 that shot everything well, factory or reloads - for $125 it was very close to a 1 moa gun. The next ten factory rifles didn’t shoot that good. The first custom barrel that was put on my hunting rifle was a real eye opener - it shot everything that I loaded very very well. I didn’t experiment with seating depth, or powder charge other than a max load that wouldn’t produce pressures that would ruin a case after ten reloads, and done. Think about barrels as a consumable, just like components. Every shot is the cost of components and cost of barrel wear. The added cost of an extra accurate gun barrel is somewhere between $1/shot for a barrel burner to $.20/shot for a cartridge like the 6.5 creed. Would you spend an extra $2 for a sub moa 10 shot Creedmoor group? Most people would.
You’re correct about those being good techniques. I edited that post to say so and I should have added the context. The only reason I stopped and didnt do those things was it shot so well. I was going to be happy with consistent groups under a certain size and it shot everything into half that, so there was no need to experiment further since it was only used as a hunting rifle.Changing incremental powder charges is good technique; changing seating depth is also good technique. Thing is you want to find the right powder charge and then dick with the seating depth. That said, OP is a hunter at heart not a paper puncher. Shooting Minute of Deer (4~5 MOA) should be doable with minimal trial and error. There are good indicators as to which powder might be right for your situation.
Right now I'm playing around with IMR 4064 and getting fairly good results. I can hit whatever I point at @100yds. Not going to mess with seating depth cause only about half the length of the cartridge neck is filled with a bullet. ~ 2.665" OAL if I do everything right.
With the 6ARC I'm still experimenting with different powders. It's a fun thing to do.
Appreciate the offer but that’s a full days drive and then some. Thank you though
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Some of us are very familiar to BigStick from another board. While he can be very irritating at times, he is an extremely knowledgeable reloader and gunsmith. His technical advice is usually very good.Enlighten me. And I don't know you but I'll accept the notion we are "pals".
I was responding to OP's remarks, not to a bloviating bully