morning, NO BODY MASTERS RELOADING. a day on the bench,
a day on the range is a never ending education.
way to many varibles in consideration in this
education. justme gbot tum
+1
An interesting observation of my own from many years of shooting and reloading. When I was young, I took to shooting like a duck to water. I practiced hard and became a good shooter. I entered many different types of competitions in order to become proficient in all the shooting sports.
The fact that each sport had rules and you kept score, It was easy to see the/an improvement in my shooting and what worked and what didn't.
I reloaded because of expense and as long as my scores kept getting better I was satisfied. As I got older, and my shooting prowess seemed to fade I started relying on better reloads to take up the slack. This is when I found out the value of precision ammo.
So now that I am older, I rely on my ammo to make the difference and I also have more time to do a much better job of it. I will do what ever it takes to make even the smallest improvements to my ammo.
I once made a change in primers on one very accurate load, and gained .004 thousandths in group size. I still use the same primer for that load and it still shoots under 1/10th MOA in spite of my shooting.
To bad I didn't figure it out when I was shooting matches. if I can see the difference now, I know I could have taken advantage of better ammo when I was younger and a much better shot.
The point is, don't rely on one thing to improve your shooting ability.
Build accurate rifles, load accurate/precision ammo and work on shooter skills at the same time. Don't wait to learn how to load great ammo or build accurate rifles like I did.
It takes a lifetime of reloading to get it right and you never get it perfect if you are trying. read as much as you can and experiment with each change to see if it is better or just more internet garbage
from some self proclaimed expert. You will never know unless you try it your self.
J E CUSTOM