Well, back home after 9 weeks offshore, and I did the push test this morning with my 75 Shadow Line and 7 different bullet types.
I don't know if what I'm getting is peculiar or not. The BBI's and Xtreme plated came in about where I expected, but I got some differences from what I expected with Berry's bullets, so I thought I should ask.
I expected the Berry's Round Nose bullets of various weights to push test somewhere in the range of 1.135-1.15 range because once the .015 is subtracted for a safe jump gap, that would put the OAL in the 1.12-1.135 range, which is where I see a lot of RN rounds for CZ getting loaded. Mine pushed considerably longer, however, with RN's. And it seems like FP's are commonly getting loaded in the 1.06-1.08 range, so I expected something in the 1.08-1.0 range. My FP's pushed shorter.
These are the measurements they pushed to, on average:
Berry's 115RN ---- 1.180
Berry's 124HBRN - 1.209
Berry's 147RN ---- 1.198
Berry's 124HBFP - 1.067
Each bullet type got push-tested and measured 9, 12, or 15 times, depending on how consistent the results were, with different bullets and different brass. When the Berry's RN's were coming out that long, I thought "Great, all the legroom I could want, AND I'll get above average room with the FP's." WRONG. Cutting 0.015 off that FP measurement is going to yield 1.05 (and I probably need to drop back more than 0.015, more on that later), which seems extremely short to me. I know it's within Saami specs, but it still seems awfully short.
My surprise, and the reason I'm questioning things is that I don't get why the RN's would come out higher than average, and the FP's lower. Both longer or both shorter, sure, that makes sense, but not one type longer and one shorter. Or is that my problem: I'm wrong about my RN's being higher than average. Or wrong about my FP's being lower than average. My expectations were based off my memory of what others had reported, which I realize is pretty imprecise/unreliable, so feel free to let me have it on that point.
Also, as far as dropping off the recommended .015 for a safe jump gap, I may need to make that .025. With several individual bullets, if I dropped off .015, they would spin freely about 320 degrees, then slow down (meet a little resistance) over a short stretch. I assume that's the result of the lands extending out a tiny bit more in a small range AND bullets not being perfectly concentric. If I drop back .02 off the pushed-to measurement, I spin freely all the way around. I figure making that .025 would be playing it safe enough, but maybe not -- .03? I've got plenty of room with the RN's, but that would cut my FP OAL to 1.037, which I really don't see myself doing. That's far shorter than what I'm comfortable with.
Any thoughts?