Seating depth - does it even matter?

Yes it matters. Biggest difference I’ve seen personally is kissing the lands vs not.
While not backed by any real data just general observations. I do agree with this. When im kissing the lands my groups have been tighter. I would argue for practical real world hunting the difference is not enough to matter. Sub moa is more than enough.
 
More erratic behavior when just touching the lands?
Kissing or just touching is a relationship that changes very quickly. Throats move, that's a fact we all can agree on. Load 100 rounds at "just touching lands" and but he time that 100 rds is through the gun, that base to ogive can now be up to 9-12 thou off lands(extreme case scenario, as 28Nos)
 
Kissing or just touching is a relationship that changes very quickly. Throats move, that's a fact we all can agree on. Load 100 rounds at "just touching lands" and but he time that 100 rds is through the gun, that base to ogive can now be up to 9-12 thou off lands(extreme case scenario, as 28Nos)
Yeah that’s why I don’t load into the lands anymore. Even though it normally shoots lights out. I’d see quick velocity drop as soon as I shot the lands out a little bit and some erratic dispersion. Much more simple to just stay out of them. Like in my little test. Held nearly the same velocity with a .200 jump difference.
 
Yeah that’s why I don’t load into the lands anymore. Even though it normally shoots lights out. I’d see quick velocity drop as soon as I shot the lands out a little bit and some erratic dispersion. Much more simple to just stay out of them. Like in my little test. Held nearly the same velocity with a .200 jump difference.
Also, once you've gone to extract a round and the bullet has stuck in the lands and you dump powder all over the inside of your action and trigger, you'll think twice about loading close to the lands haha.
 
Also, once you've gone to extract a round and the bullet has stuck in the lands and you dump powder all over the inside of your action and trigger, you'll think twice about loading close to the lands haha.
I absolutely know it’s happened to people exactly as you described.

I’ve taken a chambered barrel off on its own, not attached to the action, so you can actually measure this stuff. Loaded a bullet really long, and shoved it by hand .080 into the lands. Pried it out with a screw driver and had no change in BTO measurements. And that’s only with .0015 neck tension.

So once I tested that a couple times I wasn’t really scared much of sticking a bullet. Considering I would only jam like .010-.015.

But I’ve seen it happen to someone else in person. Powder everywhere. Bullet stuck in barrel and have to knock it out with a cleaning rod lol.

Not sure how his ammo was loaded exactly. But yeah, it was a mess and pretty avoidable by just jumping the little bastards lol.
 
With regards to seating depth I think what matters most is consistency. If everything else is the same except the seating depth then you are effectively the case capacity which would directly effect chamber pressure and in return effect muzzle velocity. With that being said I would definitely say that seating depth matters.


Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk
 
With regards to seating depth I think what matters most is consistency. If everything else is the same except the seating depth then you are effectively the case capacity which would directly effect chamber pressure and in return effect muzzle velocity. With that being said I would definitely say that seating depth matters.
See post #357.
 
Seating depth make a huge difference
If you tak a given charge wt and seat the bullet out it increases case volume and presure drops
But also spike presure when bullet engage riffeling happens sooner in the presure curve
So there is no magic seating depth every rifle load combo will respond differently
I have every rifle set up backed off the lands
20-40 tho maybe more. I found that kissing the lands makes an immediate presure spike that would cause the rifle to shoot erratic when temperature or altitude changed
My approach has always been the most forgiving load for hunting
When I played around with benchrest there was a different aproach
I found using methods for benchrest doesnt
Necessarily give the best load for hinting
The rifle will tell you what it likes.
 
There is a threshold in field shooting where more precision does not equate to higher hit rates. When I was obsessed with winning Border Wars matches we would practice on 1 moa and smaller targets all the time. Had targets hanging from straps that were too long and shot the edges of them to get them to dangle again from over 400 yards multiple times. I don’t care how super human you are with a rifle. My gunsmith kicked my ass in most matches when we shot against each other. In positional shooting trying to shoot tiny targets, my wobble zone was way smaller than his. It didn't matter because we rarely shot those targets in matches and he would manage to hit them anyway. I watched him lay down and shoot a 6" circle at 1000 yards in one shot multiple times. We discussed guns shooting tiny groups a lot. It is fun to have a gun that will do it. Once you can put 30 rounds into 3/4 to 1 moa, you can shoot pretty small targets on a pretty regular basis. Having a gun that will put 30 in 3/8 moa is very difficult(a unicorn) to come across/build and is not noticeable shooting 1 moa targets from a gun that puts 30 into 3/4 moa.

Even going from 1.25 moa to 3/4 moa is not very noticeable anecdotally. A little, but not much. If you make the target 1.5 to 2 moa, instead of 1 moa the difference gets even harder to notice.

Field shooting is not f class or benchrest and hunting is not prs or nrl shooting. In situations where you get even two shots to make an impact, the likelihood of hitting goes up substantially. If you are in a hunting situation where only one shot is going to happen unless you hit the animal on the first shot, the wind is the problem. If you can use the first shot to get the wind call there are more and more guys every year that will put the second shot within the guns cone of fire on the target.

The point is, while these things are very interesting and fun to explore, the functional implications for hunting big game are very small.
 
Seating depth make a huge difference
If you tak a given charge wt and seat the bullet out it increases case volume and presure drops
But also spike presure when bullet engage riffeling happens sooner in the presure curve
So there is no magic seating depth every rifle load combo will respond differently
I have every rifle set up backed off the lands
20-40 tho maybe more. I found that kissing the lands makes an immediate presure spike that would cause the rifle to shoot erratic when temperature or altitude changed
My approach has always been the most forgiving load for hunting
When I played around with benchrest there was a different aproach
I found using methods for benchrest doesnt
Necessarily give the best load for hinting
The rifle will tell you what it likes.
See post #357, from .010" off the lands to almost 1/4" deeper the velocity average was 8fps different..
 
Back
Top