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The Range
Ammo & Reloading
Starting Reloading - First Bullet Seating Depth Test Results
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<blockquote data-quote="Okie4570" data-source="post: 3353090" data-attributes="member: 15643"><p>Chrono is just icing on the cake for load development imo and not needed to shoot sub moa groups.. You're already using loading manuals of some sort so you know the approximate velocity at the muzzle and at 100y. Keep up with your consistency on the reloading bench and procedures as that's where the accuracy comes from as long as your rifle, optics, rest and you do your part when squeezing the trigger. I think back to all of the reloading my dad and his friends did in the 60's through the 80's and the only way they had any idea how fast their loads were was from what was printed in the manuals. That didn't keep them from having rifle after rifle and load after load that could produce dime size groups or smaller. Now when you start shooting long distances and want an accurate go to chart for your loads, then a chrono is needed without a doubt.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Okie4570, post: 3353090, member: 15643"] Chrono is just icing on the cake for load development imo and not needed to shoot sub moa groups.. You're already using loading manuals of some sort so you know the approximate velocity at the muzzle and at 100y. Keep up with your consistency on the reloading bench and procedures as that's where the accuracy comes from as long as your rifle, optics, rest and you do your part when squeezing the trigger. I think back to all of the reloading my dad and his friends did in the 60's through the 80's and the only way they had any idea how fast their loads were was from what was printed in the manuals. That didn't keep them from having rifle after rifle and load after load that could produce dime size groups or smaller. Now when you start shooting long distances and want an accurate go to chart for your loads, then a chrono is needed without a doubt. [/QUOTE]
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Starting Reloading - First Bullet Seating Depth Test Results
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