Yep, they plunk nice and easy in the barrel and spin and pop up when I shake the barrel lightly. It’s not on the lands.
Wobbly, thank you. Yes, 865, sorry, posted that last night after a full more-vexing-than-average work day. I choose to set the slowest round to be 865, to ensure I make power factor (850) at any match. I see you guys posting your data and I see single digit ES and SD, and I’m seeing SDs in the 20-30, and ES of 80-90 fps currenty. Accuracy is okay, but I don’t have a Ransom rest to really explore that in detail. But my normal measured freestyle accuracy at 30-50 feet is just fine.
I actually have some of those RMR 147 gr match winner bullets. At least enough to test certainly and use for major matches. But I have more of the 147 gr Berry's RN and will be practicing with those. If some modest effort to tighten up my ES and SD (the accuracy is just fine, BTW) on the Berrys doesn’t work work, I’ll try those RMRs instead. But I’m thinking it’s something I’m doing on the press. I’ve quadruple checked my charge drops…I even using a trickler to hand charge 20 rounds with exactly the same amount of powder, using my very sensitive scale, and the ES and SD issues persisted. Of all the variables at play, the expansion process is one I hadn’t looked into the most so that’s the current area of enquiry. I even checked the concentricity of my expansion plug wondering if I had a lemon or something. Nope, it’s fine.
I flare just enough to allow the Berry's to not fall off the shellplate as the shellplate autorotates. It is, indeed, a tiny flare compared to what I had to do with coated lead bullets (which I no longer shoot). I am using a Lee Taper Crimp die set to just remove this bell, I mic the case mouth during this setup process and periodically, and all rounds plonk easily into the barrel or a case gauge.
So, do I need to expand at all? Can I just flare a little and skip the neck expansion step altogether? The expansion seems to be adding about 0.002” to the ID of the upper case. That’s what I found…does that sound right?
Wobbly, how deep are you seating the 147 RN Berry then? Or, rather, what's the proper way to determine just how deep the Berrys 147 RN can seat without pinching the case wall? Take a fired Starline case that accepts the bullet without too much effort, and see where it stops with very light insertion pressure? I can then mark or measure the OAL, then compare that to the push test derived max OAL length. Up to now I have set the bullet back from the max OAL, but hereafter I can use the other end of that range as my reference point. Maybe 0.010” up from pinching the case wall? 0.015”?
Would very slight eccentricity of bullet seating cause this without affecting accuracy that much? I modified my Dillon seating anvil to stop dimpling the tip of the bullet during seating, I drilled it out so there is no pressure on the tip but rather on the ogive. My concentricity seems fine, though...
Thanks
C