Question: Through personal experience, have any handloaders found evidence to the contrary?
“n practical terms there is absolutely no reason to weight-sort cases as a precision-improving step. These tests include cartridge cases of the same brand that have been prepared identically, but with weights varying by up to 10 percent. That’s an absolutely huge variance that should eliminate the possibility of loading ammunition that will deliver a high level of precision and an extremely low level of velocity deviation according to conventional wisdom. Many handloaders sort brass into groups according to less than 1% [one percent] weight variation.” -- Kyle Lynch. “Raise Your Modern Precision Rifle Skills.” The Complete Book of Reloading, 2017. pp. 72-73.
NOTE: In compliance with this site’s “Copyrighted Material Policy” located under “Forum Rules”, the above article extract is four (4) sentences in length. To “44 AMP” and other staff members, there is no URL for this extract. It is taken from hard copy publication.
“n practical terms there is absolutely no reason to weight-sort cases as a precision-improving step. These tests include cartridge cases of the same brand that have been prepared identically, but with weights varying by up to 10 percent. That’s an absolutely huge variance that should eliminate the possibility of loading ammunition that will deliver a high level of precision and an extremely low level of velocity deviation according to conventional wisdom. Many handloaders sort brass into groups according to less than 1% [one percent] weight variation.” -- Kyle Lynch. “Raise Your Modern Precision Rifle Skills.” The Complete Book of Reloading, 2017. pp. 72-73.
NOTE: In compliance with this site’s “Copyrighted Material Policy” located under “Forum Rules”, the above article extract is four (4) sentences in length. To “44 AMP” and other staff members, there is no URL for this extract. It is taken from hard copy publication.