MarkInPA
Well-Known Member
Something I have been thinking about lately. My reloading room is my unheated garage. Currently it is 26 degrees Fahrenheit outside and 52 degrees inside my garage. It's an attached garage so I guess it does get some heat from the rest of the house. Knowing that most objects shrink when they get cold and expand when they get hot, except water being the strange one, it makes me wonder how this effects our reloading. Our brass and bullets will be affected by this, as well as our reloading tools such as our presses and dies. Considering that we are measuring things down to the 1/1000 of inch, this could be significant. Things like interference fits between our brass and bullets, shoulder bumps, bullet seating depths, trimmed brass lengths, and sized brass. Then what happens to our reloaded rounds as they are subject to differing environments where the temperature could fluctuate from when it was reloaded. Been lots of discussion about temperature sensitive powders but, I wonder if much thought has been put into this aspect of our reloading. Anybody have any ideas or theories they could share? How significant do you think this may be?