PEI Rob
Well-Known Member
Try another bullet, unlikely the problem but a very quick check. If not, anneal the cases out of the rifle than prep them.
The inside chamfer of the cases influences the alignment during seating of the bullet with the case mouth. This alignment in turn influences the straightness of the finished load. Since you apparently no longer have any of the earlier batch of bullets, we can't compare diameters. What I am suggesting is that a larger diameter would influence alignment. Examine the inside chamfer of your brass. The most desirable configuration is for minimal outside deburr, and a long, low-angle inside chamfer. Experiment with allowing for more inside chamfer. If you're not using a low-angle tool, usually identified as "VLD", it may be worth pursuing if another cause for the excessive run-out isn't identified. The tools will have a 20 to 30 degree angle....can you expound on this a bit? I honestly don't know, and have no way of knowing now if there was a change in bullet diameter, but how would this change runout numbers?
Here is my input. I have a 338 edge ai and I have some loaded rounds that vary quite a bit. I use redding competion dies neck and bullet seater with no expander ball and, I neck turn and aneal cases but have many lots that I reload and not all are turned. I have to say that the neck turned cases have the least amount of runout but I believe the issue is in the bullet. Even the neck turned cases have issues but they do have better consistency, but it still leaves some to be desired. I am also using a forster press. I use sierra 300 smks and considering how much they vary in bearing surface (I've seen up to .015") I feel that a lot of the run out has to do with the consistency of the bullet itself.
How round is that darn thing? It's a lot of copper and soft lead. How much does the point where the press grabs the bullet to push it into the case vary from the centerline datum? In other words how much does the point of the bullet vary from the centerline?
Does anyone measure this with the sierra smks?
I have heard Berger has made some new dies/tooling and their BS varies very little from bullet to bullet (+or -.001 or less). I sure wish they would make some 338 cal so I could try them.