44hunter45
Well-known member
I've been handloading since 1986. I make beautiful, functional, consistent hunting ammo. I can hit sub-MOA when I pay attention, but it is not target/match quality ammo.
When I was younger it was all about velocity and I stuffed powder in the case until I got pressure. I made a lot of compressed loads.
As I got older, I chose powders that put me at my pressure at a high density, but not compressed. My theory is that variations in individual case volumes are exaggerated as a load nears 100%.
Leaving enough headroom for the variances means fewer fliers. Meaning that even if I weigh all my cases and they are exactly the same. I weigh all my bullets and they are exactly the same. There will still be some loads that fill with powder before others.
Here is the question for you guys that are making single digit SD ammo. Does any of that matter? Is load density that big a factor? Can you achieve small SDs with compressed loads?
Or is it all about super consistent neck tension?
How are you getting super small SDs?
When I was younger it was all about velocity and I stuffed powder in the case until I got pressure. I made a lot of compressed loads.
As I got older, I chose powders that put me at my pressure at a high density, but not compressed. My theory is that variations in individual case volumes are exaggerated as a load nears 100%.
Leaving enough headroom for the variances means fewer fliers. Meaning that even if I weigh all my cases and they are exactly the same. I weigh all my bullets and they are exactly the same. There will still be some loads that fill with powder before others.
Here is the question for you guys that are making single digit SD ammo. Does any of that matter? Is load density that big a factor? Can you achieve small SDs with compressed loads?
Or is it all about super consistent neck tension?
How are you getting super small SDs?