blackfox 9 Posted March 21, 2010 Report Share Posted March 21, 2010 Hello Chaps, well i was doing a snip of reloading today for the .204 and after some tips from a mate, thought i would weigh my cases as my groups still arnt as tight as id like..... I know this case weighing may be common practise for some, its worth a thought if you dont. So after de-buring cleaning etc etc i then primed my cases and began weighing, for simplicity i thought that i would keep them in per grain ranges i.e a 96.2 would go in the same as 96.9. I know this may not be a tight enough weight range but its the first time ive done this. Anyways i found out the following, this is based on a total of 92 cases. 12 @ 105 range 28 @ 97 range 52 @ 96 range obviously, there is a big difference in weights... the outside dimensions would be the same but the the internal dimensions would be different as the "thickness" of the brass. i.e more internal volume It may not matter (as much) with larger calibres, but for the likes of the .17 & .20 cals obviously this can make a huge difference on ballistics. Thoughts & Comments welcome chap`s Quote Link to post
clint 45 Posted March 21, 2010 Report Share Posted March 21, 2010 Are this case all same factory ? Quote Link to post
blackfox 9 Posted March 21, 2010 Author Report Share Posted March 21, 2010 Are this case all same factory ? Yeah, sorry i forgot to put that in, they are all Hornady brass. Cheers Quote Link to post
andyf 144 Posted March 21, 2010 Report Share Posted March 21, 2010 Hello Chaps, well i was doing a snip of reloading today for the .204 and after some tips from a mate, thought i would weigh my cases as my groups still arnt as tight as id like..... I know this case weighing may be common practise for some, its worth a thought if you dont. So after de-buring cleaning etc etc i then primed my cases and began weighing, for simplicity i thought that i would keep them in per grain ranges i.e a 96.2 would go in the same as 96.9. I know this may not be a tight enough weight range but its the first time ive done this. Anyways i found out the following, this is based on a total of 92 cases. 12 @ 105 range 28 @ 97 range 52 @ 96 range obviously, there is a big difference in weights... the outside dimensions would be the same but the the internal dimensions would be different as the "thickness" of the brass. i.e more internal volume It may not matter (as much) with larger calibres, but for the likes of the .17 & .20 cals obviously this can make a huge difference on ballistics. Thoughts & Comments welcome chap`s Well: I don't think it makes any difference at all, and given that YOU have NO CHOICE of brass because you bought a 'weird' calibre, what are you planning to do about the difference in the weights anyway? What you need to concentrate on are the things YOU can influence, bullet, powder, primer and most of all consistancy in all of the preceeding, get only the best of components, take great care especially with the powder charge weight and the bullet seating. The case is 'only' a container for the powder and a grip for the bullet, not anything to get excited about, but if your losing sleep trade it for a .223 get Lapau brass and sleep easy! AndyF Quote Link to post
blackfox 9 Posted March 22, 2010 Author Report Share Posted March 22, 2010 :realmad: Well: I don't think it makes any difference at all, , what are you planning to do about the difference in the weights anyway? What you need to concentrate on are the things YOU can influence, bullet, powder, primer and most of all consistancy in all of the preceeding, get only the best of components, take great care especially with the powder charge weight and the bullet seating. The case is 'only' a container for the powder and a grip for the bullet, not anything to get excited about, but if your losing sleep trade it for a .223 get Lapau brass and sleep easy! AndyF Lets talk about SOME of the GUFF YOUR reply CONTAINS .204 - ITS very OBVIOUS that YOU dont KNOW what THE hell YOUR talking ABOUT Brass wise i can get the following Hornady Norma Nosler Remington Winchester And thats just from Midway UK.... there is more avaliable from other suppliers, so to answer that comment brass is not an issue. I want to be 1 hole grouping at 120 yrds. Whilst talking about things i can influence.... maybe i should purchase my bullet heads in by the thousand to then be sure that they are all from the same batch (competition shooters do this) As for the " what are you planning to do about the difference in the weights anyway?" easy really i just adjust powder weights slightly to increase accuracy. And as you seem very disimformed & dont really know your mustard, i made some bullets and the grouping was different for the various weights. Its funny how you talk about consistancy, yet if the cases weight ranges from 96-105 grains that is not consistant. "and given that YOU have NO CHOICE of brass because you bought a 'weird' calibre" and for that i just think :wankerzo4: Quote Link to post
v-max 2 Posted March 22, 2010 Report Share Posted March 22, 2010 I do or did in the 22.250 & 25/06 but as you said for the smaller case capacity it could make a diffrence. I know you aint loading yet but i think you should try crimping some rounds as this can give you a consistant start pressure i do all mine have done for 13-14yrs. i have sorted my cases out by type ie norma/winchester etc. Quote Link to post
flytie 1 Posted March 22, 2010 Report Share Posted March 22, 2010 I know this case weighing may be common practise for some, its worth a thought if you dont. It may not matter (as much) with larger calibres, Thoughts & Comments welcome chap`s No, I don't! ft Quote Link to post
coldweld 65 Posted March 22, 2010 Report Share Posted March 22, 2010 (edited) Hello Chaps, well i was doing a snip of reloading today for the .204 and after some tips from a mate, thought i would weigh my cases as my groups still arnt as tight as id like..... I know this case weighing may be common practise for some, its worth a thought if you dont. So after de-buring cleaning etc etc i then primed my cases and began weighing, for simplicity i thought that i would keep them in per grain ranges i.e a 96.2 would go in the same as 96.9. I know this may not be a tight enough weight range but its the first time ive done this. Anyways i found out the following, this is based on a total of 92 cases. 12 @ 105 range 28 @ 97 range 52 @ 96 range obviously, there is a big difference in weights... the outside dimensions would be the same but the the internal dimensions would be different as the "thickness" of the brass. i.e more internal volume It may not matter (as much) with larger calibres, but for the likes of the .17 & .20 cals obviously this can make a huge difference on ballistics. Thoughts & Comments welcome chap`s Well: I don't think it makes any difference at all, and given that YOU have NO CHOICE of brass because you bought a 'weird' calibre, what are you planning to do about the difference in the weights anyway? What you need to concentrate on are the things YOU can influence, bullet, powder, primer and most of all consistancy in all of the preceeding, get only the best of components, take great care especially with the powder charge weight and the bullet seating. The case is 'only' a container for the powder and a grip for the bullet, not anything to get excited about, but if your losing sleep trade it for a .223 get Lapau brass and sleep easy! AndyF Pehaps we should get rid of all 'weird' calibre's and stick to all proper stuff !! Oh how silly of me ALL of the METALIC cases were weird at one time . Edited March 23, 2010 by coldweld Quote Link to post
blackfox 9 Posted March 22, 2010 Author Report Share Posted March 22, 2010 I do or did in the 22.250 & 25/06 but as you said for the smaller case capacity it could make a diffrence. I know you aint loading yet but i think you should try crimping some rounds as this can give you a consistant start pressure i do all mine have done for 13-14yrs. i have sorted my cases out by type ie norma/winchester etc. Hello, well I have loaded some of my weight sorted cases.... They do actually shoot differently- the grouping was bigger from one to the other. So it dose make a difference...... I have friends that shoot .17 rem & .204 they swear by this methord. Quote Link to post
garyw 0 Posted March 22, 2010 Report Share Posted March 22, 2010 unless you are shooting benchrest then i dont see the need to weight sort cases.for my rifles i would rather concentrate on getting my reloading consistant and not worry about internal volume of cases.i shoot .17 rem and have done for a fair few years now the rp brass is not the best in the world so sorting them for weight isnt going to help reinvent the wheel.concentrate on loading and then your shooting style and this will pay more than sorting brass. Quote Link to post
andyf 144 Posted March 27, 2010 Report Share Posted March 27, 2010 :realmad: Well: I don't think it makes any difference at all, , what are you planning to do about the difference in the weights anyway? What you need to concentrate on are the things YOU can influence, bullet, powder, primer and most of all consistancy in all of the preceeding, get only the best of components, take great care especially with the powder charge weight and the bullet seating. The case is 'only' a container for the powder and a grip for the bullet, not anything to get excited about, but if your losing sleep trade it for a .223 get Lapau brass and sleep easy! AndyF Lets talk about SOME of the GUFF YOUR reply CONTAINS .204 - ITS very OBVIOUS that YOU dont KNOW what THE hell YOUR talking ABOUT Brass wise i can get the following Hornady Norma Nosler Remington Winchester And thats just from Midway UK.... there is more avaliable from other suppliers, so to answer that comment brass is not an issue. I want to be 1 hole grouping at 120 yrds. Whilst talking about things i can influence.... maybe i should purchase my bullet heads in by the thousand to then be sure that they are all from the same batch (competition shooters do this) As for the " what are you planning to do about the difference in the weights anyway?" easy really i just adjust powder weights slightly to increase accuracy. And as you seem very disimformed & dont really know your mustard, i made some bullets and the grouping was different for the various weights. Its funny how you talk about consistancy, yet if the cases weight ranges from 96-105 grains that is not consistant. "and given that YOU have NO CHOICE of brass because you bought a 'weird' calibre" and for that i just think :wankerzo4: 1 hole groups at 120 yards? Advice, throw away the Remington, forget .204 Ruger (Weird calibre) cos it's not going to make it, get an RPA/Callum Fergusson in 6MM PPC. Spend all your time weighing cases, then shoot cardboard until you get a one hole group at 120 yards, now having cracked it with shooting take up golf, 18 hole in ones no doubt? AndyF Quote Link to post
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