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The Range
Ammo & Reloading
Different seating pressures
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<blockquote data-quote="tRidiot" data-source="post: 3588254" data-attributes="member: 9374"><p>So you're talking about neck tension? Did you measure this by before and after case mouth measurements or what? I'd be interested to know the measurements if you have them. While those aren't terrible flyers, at 500 or 1000 yards those could definitely be a "miss". While I'm aware of how this affects rounds, in my (albeit VERY limited) experience having relatively low neck tension is good, as long as it is consistent. With a higher neck tension, things get much more unpredictable out at distance (so I am led to believe). So while you can overdo it with neck tensions too LOW, you want it somewhere in the low-mid range, not at either end of the spectrum.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="tRidiot, post: 3588254, member: 9374"] So you're talking about neck tension? Did you measure this by before and after case mouth measurements or what? I'd be interested to know the measurements if you have them. While those aren't terrible flyers, at 500 or 1000 yards those could definitely be a "miss". While I'm aware of how this affects rounds, in my (albeit VERY limited) experience having relatively low neck tension is good, as long as it is consistent. With a higher neck tension, things get much more unpredictable out at distance (so I am led to believe). So while you can overdo it with neck tensions too LOW, you want it somewhere in the low-mid range, not at either end of the spectrum. [/QUOTE]
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