Survivalist Pro
Photo: Anna Shvets
Most bullets shoot most accurately when seated to within . 035 inch to . 015 inch of touching the lands. Many benchrest shooters like them just kissing the lands.
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Read More »If the magazine and ejection port allow, fine-tune the seating depth to perfection. Always be sure to seat at least as deep as the caliber. A .308 bullet, for instance, should be seated at least .308-inch deep in the neck. Longer bullets will be easier to seat close to the lands than short ones. This is why persnickety shooters custom order barrels specifically for one bullet. Now comes the hard part: determining maximum OAL. This number will be slightly different for every bullet due to nose shape or ogive. You need to measure from the front of the bearing surface, not the tip of the bullet, to the lands. The old standard trick for this is to resize a case and start a bullet into it one caliber deep. No primer or powder should be in this dummy case! Then twirl the bullet above a candle so that soot builds up on it. Carefully insert this round into the chamber and close the breech/bolt. You may feel significant resistance. This is the bullet contacting the lands. Extract the round, seat the bullet slightly deeper and try again. Eventually you will reach the point where the cartridge/bullet chambers. Now fine tune this by again blackening the bullet and checking for land marks after you’ve chambered it. They will show as bright spots on the blacking. When you can just begin to see this contact, measure the OAL. This will be your starting point for seating deeper. You have two options for measuring OAL: From the base to the bullet tip, and from the base to the ogive/bearing surface junction. Bullet tip length can vary as much as .050 inch, so it’s best to seat and measure at least 10 rounds to get an average. You can pull the bullets and reuse them. Alternatively, get a PTG Bullet Comparator, which looks like a bolt nut with multi-caliber holes around its perimeter. The span of the nut is constant, so you when you push a loaded cartridge into the appropriate caliber hole and measure from the cartridge base to top of the comparator, you need only subtract the width of the comparator to get an accurate measurement of OAL from the start of the bearing surface, not the bullet’s tip. Another handy device for getting this bearing surface measurement is Hornady’s Lock-N-Load Overall Length Gauge. This tool uses a modified cartridge case screwed to a guide rod that pushes a case and loosely fitting bullet into the chamber. A plunger is then pushed up through the case to shove the bullet against the rifling. The plunger is locked into place, the unit is removed and measurements are taken from the start of the ogive to the cartridge base for a precise OAL.
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Read More »Once you know the OAL, it’s a simple matter to turn down the seating die plunger bit by bit, measuring as you go until you get your desired seating depth/freebore. Some like to begin with .015” and work down, some vice versa. If you start this close, do so with a light charge of powder to prevent excessive pressures. You can always bring pressures/velocities up later if indicated. The quickest way to determine which seating depth gives best accuracy is to build three sample loads at each depth — say .015”, .025”, .035” — and test each from the bench. The most accurate should suggest where you need to further tweak your settings, whether that be deeper or in between two of your tested depths. At some point you should hit the magic spot and see your groups shrink nicely, sometimes even amazingly. Be aware that bullet lengths and shapes can change subtly from lot to lot, so if you seat too close to the lands with one bullet lot, a new lot could end up touching the lands and raising pressures. With hunting loads, you’re better off — and safer — settling for slightly reduced accuracy in exchange for a deeper seating depth that will accommodate dimensional changes among lots. You don’t need quarter-MOA accuracy to hit a deer at 500 yards, anyway. For more precise target and varmint loads, you should measure OAL for each new lot of bullets. All this sounds more complicated and confusing than it really is. Once you’ve tried it, the veil lifts and the mystery is revealed. Basically you are tailoring bullet seating depth for the “sweet spot” your individual rifle likes with a particular style/brand/weight bullet. Once you’ve measured your deep-seated accuracy challenges, you can fix them. • Are Wildcats Worth It?: Your heart palpitates for a custom chambering, but think before you leap. • 10 Steps to a Tack Driver: Turning a so-so shooter into a MOA rifle might be easier than you think. This article was published in the July 2010 edition of Buckmasters GunHunter Magazine. Subscribe today to have GunHunter delivered to your home.
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