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Cartridge Case Weight

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5 comments

  • toad67

    Are you going to sort each brand by weight also?

    0
  • Okie743

    I reload and work up reloads for maximum accuracy in Bolt action rifles that I have glass bedded.

    I weigh the brass I'm going to reload and for the 30-06, 270 area of caliber rifles I have the brass separated into a tolerance of not over 4 grains difference in weight. The name on the brass (manufacturer of the brass) is not as important as keeping the weight within a tolerance.

    I can tell you this from experience.


    If I took your 181 gr Sako brass and your Fed 200 grain brass and loaded each brass with the same exact recipe and shot them at the same target in a very accurate rifle that is capable of one inch or better groups, the groups would most likely spread to as much as 3 inches.

    I've proven this to others who just done a jaw dropper when they seen such.

    Summary: What I'm saying is you might take the 181 gr Brass and shoot a one inch or less group, then take the 200 gr FC brass and shoot a 1 inch group but they will usually impact at a different place on the target, sometimes as much as 3 inch apart. (the heavier weight brass usually has less space/volume inside)

    Just mixing up brass and ignoring the weight of the brass can quite often make a very accurate rifle look very bad accuracy wise.

    0
  • Butchdog3

    Heavier brass will usually mean less case volume as stated and can lead to higher pressures.

    Max loads could be a kaboom.

    3
  • Butchdog3

    Oak, what else do you weigh beside bras?

    Someone had to ask.

    6
  • toad67
    Butchdog3: 30070568680987/comments/30070526551195

    Oak, what else do you weigh beside bras?

    Someone had to ask.

    Generally, you don't need to weigh them, you can judge them by the size.........

    9

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