seidersjoden
Well-Known Member
Has anyone ever noticed after seating a bullet that the seating depth changes after a couple hours?
After reloading several rounds, triple checking the seating depth, zeroing my calipers and reconfirming each bullet several times that the depth is where I want it, I walk away from the reloading table then in a few hours I noticed the bullet seating depths have increased. Is this due to the trapped air inside pushing the bullet out or the compressed powder/gases inside forcing the bullet out?
I'm running a .365" bushing for 338 Lapua AI, plenty of neck tension, it takes pliers and a lot of twisting to get a bullet out so it's not like there's not enough tension on the bullet??
After reloading several rounds, triple checking the seating depth, zeroing my calipers and reconfirming each bullet several times that the depth is where I want it, I walk away from the reloading table then in a few hours I noticed the bullet seating depths have increased. Is this due to the trapped air inside pushing the bullet out or the compressed powder/gases inside forcing the bullet out?
I'm running a .365" bushing for 338 Lapua AI, plenty of neck tension, it takes pliers and a lot of twisting to get a bullet out so it's not like there's not enough tension on the bullet??