jakesnake66
Inactive
Hey Folks,
I've struggled asking this question correctly, so I'm going to describe my situation, then ask a couple questions:
I have several 30-06 rifles, and I shoot often (at least twice a week). I have lots of 06 brass, and most of it's been fired several times. I haven't purchased new brass in a while. Each rifle has its "set" of brass, and I neck size until I have to FL size. But I DO NOT keep track of how often any cases get fired. Therefore, in a bag of fully prepped brass for my Rem 700 '06, for example, there likely are cases that have been fired twice mixed in with cases that have been fired 6 times. My goal is to address this moving forward, but I have way too much brass to throw it all away and start over fresh.
Here's the thing: lately my accuracy overall has suffered. I'm in a slump, and specifically with my 30-06s. At the same time, I've noticed various resistance to both neck sizing (with an RCBS neck sizer; sometimes I use collet sizers and thus don't get this feedback) and seating. I haven't attempted to quantify it, but after a few tens of thousands of bullets loaded, we develop a feel for these kinds of things, and it's clear to me as I work through neck sizing, say, 50 R-P '06 cases that the force required to pull the case over the expander ball varies from case to case (not referring to those times when the inside of the neck is "sticky" from not being cleaned or slightly lubed for the procedure). I have this same experience when seating bullets: from case to case different amounts of force are required to seat the bullet.
Some questions: is this likely a result of my cases having been fired and reloaded different numbers of times? Will annealing address the particular issue? Do others here mix cases that have been fired different times, or is it worth the extra effort to organize according to this criteria?
The longer I reload the more I'm convinced that consistent brass prep and brass consistency in general is the absolute key to what I call "basic" accuracy, or "hunter-class" accuracy. I can't comment on what it takes to achieve the kind of accuracy competitive BR shooters require. But to get that factory hunting rifle to shoot REAL moa (not once when all the stars align, but scores of times, in groups of 5 and 10, over a period of years), each piece of brass must match the others as close to perfect as reasonably possible. And, in my view, neck tension is the heart of it all.
I've struggled asking this question correctly, so I'm going to describe my situation, then ask a couple questions:
I have several 30-06 rifles, and I shoot often (at least twice a week). I have lots of 06 brass, and most of it's been fired several times. I haven't purchased new brass in a while. Each rifle has its "set" of brass, and I neck size until I have to FL size. But I DO NOT keep track of how often any cases get fired. Therefore, in a bag of fully prepped brass for my Rem 700 '06, for example, there likely are cases that have been fired twice mixed in with cases that have been fired 6 times. My goal is to address this moving forward, but I have way too much brass to throw it all away and start over fresh.
Here's the thing: lately my accuracy overall has suffered. I'm in a slump, and specifically with my 30-06s. At the same time, I've noticed various resistance to both neck sizing (with an RCBS neck sizer; sometimes I use collet sizers and thus don't get this feedback) and seating. I haven't attempted to quantify it, but after a few tens of thousands of bullets loaded, we develop a feel for these kinds of things, and it's clear to me as I work through neck sizing, say, 50 R-P '06 cases that the force required to pull the case over the expander ball varies from case to case (not referring to those times when the inside of the neck is "sticky" from not being cleaned or slightly lubed for the procedure). I have this same experience when seating bullets: from case to case different amounts of force are required to seat the bullet.
Some questions: is this likely a result of my cases having been fired and reloaded different numbers of times? Will annealing address the particular issue? Do others here mix cases that have been fired different times, or is it worth the extra effort to organize according to this criteria?
The longer I reload the more I'm convinced that consistent brass prep and brass consistency in general is the absolute key to what I call "basic" accuracy, or "hunter-class" accuracy. I can't comment on what it takes to achieve the kind of accuracy competitive BR shooters require. But to get that factory hunting rifle to shoot REAL moa (not once when all the stars align, but scores of times, in groups of 5 and 10, over a period of years), each piece of brass must match the others as close to perfect as reasonably possible. And, in my view, neck tension is the heart of it all.