#16
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I'm new to reloading but I have found it necessary to weigh every charge using IMR 4350. I've figured that it is the powder shape that makes it so.
Because I weight sort my brass, bullets, and primers, I guess I might as well weigh the charges individually as well. Do I need to weigh each? No. Do I feel better about consistency and a finished product? You betcha! |
#17
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What Apachehunter does
Quote:
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skeet@huntchat.com Democracy is two wolves and a lamb voting on what to have for lunch. Liberty is a well-armed lamb contesting the vote!" Benjamin Franklin |
#18
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If you are making reloads, weighing each charge isn't necessary. If you are making hand crafted ammo, it is.
If you were loading up 500 rds for a prarie dog hunt, weighing might get tedious, but for your average big game hunting, how many rounds do you need? Try this test. Make up 10 rds of your favorite "reload". Then make up 10 rounds where you deburr the flash hole, true the primer pocket, weigh the cases, bullets and the charge. Then go shooting. See if the difference is worth it to you. When I did this for my .218 Bee, the groups shrunk in half. How much was atrributed to weighing the charge? Don't know. But since I'm the jerk on the trigger I'll take all the help I can get.
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...my mistake, make that 4 coffins... |
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