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2/5/2013 10:43:40 AM EDT
question for y'all who are obsessed with accuracy

When weighing and separating your brass, how small a spread are you looking for?  Is there a 'magic' percentage that you try to hit?  I get it that a standard deviation of zero is unrealistic, I'm just curious as to what y'all do as a standard practice.
2/5/2013 10:56:53 AM EDT
[#1]
How much accuracy and what caliber are you talking about?






In my AR with match bullets (223) I'm at .5 moa with out weighing cases.







I use Win cases that have the PP (primer pockets) uniformed and trimmed to the same length.











 
2/5/2013 11:14:56 AM EDT
[#2]
Quoted:
question for y'all who are obsessed with accuracy

When weighing and separating your brass, how small a spread are you looking for?  Is there a 'magic' percentage that you try to hit?  I get it that a standard deviation of zero is unrealistic, I'm just curious as to what y'all do as a standard practice.


For me, it depends on who makes the brass, how many pieces am I separating, and what gun. At one extreme is Lapua 220 Rus brass which shows very little variation right out of the box. So, I usually sort a box of 100 to give me one group that usually doesn't vary by more than 0.1 grain (usually near the center of the bell-shaped curve).

At the other extreme is bulk brass, which I may or may not sort at all. I do sort brass for my HS Precision 223 and my Lee Six 308. Usually I can get a bell-shaped distribution, and the 3-4 groups neaar the center of the distribution may vary by 0.1 to 0.4 grains, depending on with how many brass pieces I start. Eg., I may have a group at 94.1-94.2,another at 94.3-94.4, 95.0 even, 95.1-95.3. The tails on either side of the bell shaped curve usually show a range of 2 or more grains, and can then be for other guns, but each tail is still sorted better by weight than the original bulk.
2/5/2013 11:56:57 AM EDT
[#3]


All of my Winchester brass is same lot. So uniformty is verygood. Mixed brass has lots of different variaces (neck tension, weight, capacity). Case wall concentricity is another story and very important


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