Pretty much exactly what I've been doing too.I am not sure if I have gotten lazy with my load development, or just don't think it matters too much. I don't pay near as much attention to seating depth as I used to. I will usually test 5 shot groups somewhere up close - like 30 thou off and something big like 120 thou off. Whichever one shoots better, I will do a 10 round group to confirm. I can't say I have ever done large sample testing though, and I do agree with some of the hornady philosophy that it would take very large samples to really be able to distinguish.
When you say old VS new are you referring to lead angle?There is some theory about older chamber design vs newer playing a role in this
Interesting. Yes, leade angle, freebore, and clearance in the throat are the factors commonly referenced.When you say old VS new are you referring to lead angle?
I ask because I have one rifle that has a 3° lead angle and it is pretty particular on seating depth, as in it will lay them in there with these perfect little clover leaf groups when they're seated in the happy place but during load development things would go to shooting groups measured in inches if seating depth was the only thing that was changed. I always thought that 3° lead angle had something to do with it and talked to JGS about it and they concurred.
I have, everything I can find with data taken to a significant sample size disproves that theory and further substantiates random distribution. The key there is "2 of each charge". The ballisticians are proving that when you shoot multiple groups of 30+ at each charge, or seating depth, the sinusoidal noise averages out. I've researched Satterlee, OBT, OCW, and listened to the podcasts or watched the videos with each, and they are all based on small sample size. I'm wondering if there is a hobby reloader with a hunting rifle that has proof of at least 10 round groups, where seating depth made a distinguishable difference outside of the statistical variability. I think when Alex Wheeler takes a 300 PRC case and shoots a 20 shot string with 8" of vertical, and then shrinks it to 3" of vertical on the next string by bumping up to .005" neck tension, there might be a case to be made. But there are still environmentals involved in those groups, and I think the average shooter with a hunting rifle probably can't shoot the difference in small changes like that, IF there was even a discernable difference. And 99% don't take it to a significant sample size anyways.Research positive compensation. Basically as the bullet moves down the barrel, the barrel vibrates up and down. Usually the best accuracy is when the bullet leaves the barrel, it is near the top of the "up and down" swing.
I start with powder charges first on a ladder at 600-800 yards. 2 of each charge, bullets colored with a marker to tell them apart on the target- I use white butcher paper. You can tell the "upswing" point of your barrel when different powder charges cluster together. After this I do a seating ladder with the powder charge that has the least vertical. Again 2 of each, colored. There will be one seating depth that is better, most of the time. All of this will be no more than 20 rounds.
Last I will do neck tension .002/.003/.004/.005. doesn't always round out that way- just depends on the bushings. But I do 4 bushings and track it by the bushing size. 2 of each. Since I have done this I have found most every cartridge/rifle combo has shot better with more neck tension, I would say .004 and up have been the best.
I have had very good success finding repeatable loads this way. Need to have calm day and at least 600 yards for it to work.
agreed, Jake @Unknown Munitions used seating depth to finish of my already accurate load. I believe he took me from roughly 0.75" to 0.5" using seating depth. It definitely solved my personal 3rd world problem
An article written by Bryan litz. He's the chief ballistician at Berger and applied ballistics. He regularly shoots and wins the king of two miles. He knows a thing or two about bullets and bullet design
I have seen a difference personally in groupings and velocity spreads by changing just the seating depth. It does matter, but it's only a small piece of the puzzle
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Nothing against Jake, but his procedure is small sample size load development as well. The .25" improvement is within the statistical variability of the distribution of almost any load, so the ballisticians claim if you were to shoot samples of 30 of both loads, there's likely no actual improvement. This is what's interesting to me, contrary to the traditional ideology of load "development".agreed, Jake @Unknown Munitions used seating depth to finish of my already accurate load. I believe he took me from roughly 0.75" to 0.5" using seating depth. It definitely solved my personal 3rd world problem
and was interesting
I loaded 110 ttsx in a 270 wsm and they needed to be in the lands other wise they were very inconsistent.I've found it to matter with some bullets, not at all with others. I shot a bunch of SMK's which were depth insensitive; the Amax (eldm predecessor) were depth sensitive. ELDX don't seem to be depth sensitive, TTSX don't care where you load them.
Which is contrary to most; they usually can jump a mile and still work. Every gun has it's nuances.I loaded 110 ttsx in a 270 wsm and they needed to be in the lands other wise they were very inconsistent.
If no one's testing or sample size satisfies your curiosity, and you want to know if there's an actual difference, why don't you test it yourself. Shoot 30 round test strings at various seating depths and see if what your ballisticians claim is actually true.Nothing against Jake, but his procedure is small sample size load development as well. The .25" improvement is within the statistical variability of the distribution of almost any load, so the ballisticians claim if you were to shoot samples of 30 of both loads, there's likely no actual improvement. This is what's interesting to me, contrary to the traditional ideology of load "development".
sure, but my gun definitely shot better, so for my sample size it was a win!Nothing against Jake, but his procedure is small sample size load development as well. The .25" improvement is within the statistical variability of the distribution of almost any load, so the ballisticians claim if you were to shoot samples of 30 of both loads, there's likely no actual improvement. This is what's interesting to me, contrary to the traditional ideology of load "development".
sure, but my gun definitely shot better, so for my sample size it was a win!
Very interesting, what cal? There is some theory about older chamber design vs newer playing a role in this, but those are notably different. I'm still curious what the outcome would be if both were taken to a significant sample size.
Going from a 3" group to a 0.62" group is wild. Wonder if that has more to do with them being a VLD vs a hybrid type