MOA or bust
Well-Known Member
Back at home. Remeasured everything, inspected and cleaned dies.
The issue is having a Hammer bullet "loose" in the case after loading for my 28 Nosler. Starting neck OD after sizing before loading is ~.310. Neck OD after loading a 170 HHT is ~.317. Even with that amount of neck tension, the bullet can be pulled back and forth a couple hundredths apparently between two of the last (deepest) bullet ridges. It's a long bullet and has to be seated deeply. The Hammer bullets don't have a fat shank, it measures .284 at each ridge. Berger 180 bullets seat and aren't "loose".
Looking at rounds I loaded a few months ago with same components, they are also .317 at the neck, but they're not loose.
Is it possible this brass has become too soft with annealing (AMP annealer) and gets excessively dilated with seating of the bullet?
Should I order a bushing die with .314 and .315 bushings and see if just a small step up from .314 to .317 neck OD with seating would avoid "stretching" the neck and keep elasticity?
Still don't understand what's going on.
The issue is having a Hammer bullet "loose" in the case after loading for my 28 Nosler. Starting neck OD after sizing before loading is ~.310. Neck OD after loading a 170 HHT is ~.317. Even with that amount of neck tension, the bullet can be pulled back and forth a couple hundredths apparently between two of the last (deepest) bullet ridges. It's a long bullet and has to be seated deeply. The Hammer bullets don't have a fat shank, it measures .284 at each ridge. Berger 180 bullets seat and aren't "loose".
Looking at rounds I loaded a few months ago with same components, they are also .317 at the neck, but they're not loose.
Is it possible this brass has become too soft with annealing (AMP annealer) and gets excessively dilated with seating of the bullet?
Should I order a bushing die with .314 and .315 bushings and see if just a small step up from .314 to .317 neck OD with seating would avoid "stretching" the neck and keep elasticity?
Still don't understand what's going on.