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Hunting
The Basics, Starting Out
Redding or hornady dies?
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<blockquote data-quote="Wolf76" data-source="post: 1595674" data-attributes="member: 75779"><p>The answer is dependent on many variables. I think of it like an imbalanced tire. If it's slow moving like a on a tractor (or shotgun slug), not a big deal. But on a race car, its catastrophic.</p><p>On my 300wm this equates to .75 moa. 308 was closer to 1 moa.</p><p>If better dies only shaved 1/8" off group sizes, I wouldn't spend the money. They have made a much bigger difference and saved me $$ in load development time/ components.</p><p>0-1.5 thousandths runout is an acceptable range IMO.</p><p>The Lee collet die in the only cheap die that performs well.</p><p></p><p>Good luck.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Wolf76, post: 1595674, member: 75779"] The answer is dependent on many variables. I think of it like an imbalanced tire. If it's slow moving like a on a tractor (or shotgun slug), not a big deal. But on a race car, its catastrophic. On my 300wm this equates to .75 moa. 308 was closer to 1 moa. If better dies only shaved 1/8" off group sizes, I wouldn't spend the money. They have made a much bigger difference and saved me $$ in load development time/ components. 0-1.5 thousandths runout is an acceptable range IMO. The Lee collet die in the only cheap die that performs well. Good luck. [/QUOTE]
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The Basics, Starting Out
Redding or hornady dies?
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