I'm not sure any of my words are immortal. "Don't mislead" would be good ones, though.
I don't sort bullets, at least, not by shank length. Bad habit, I suppose. I shot enough BIBs with ES (not SD) in the <8 region to not worry about velocity variations. The bad habit is I don't always shoot BIBs.
When I sort bullets, I set them up on the Juenke and have the sound head a bit up from the shank/beginning of ogive junction. And what I look at is not deviation, but the number itself -- comparatively. The old Sierra 142 MKs use to give two readings -- you'd sort into two batches. Each shot great, within their own batch. Not if you didn't segregate them, though.
I use to check boattails, too, and that was for deviation (offset mass). It was remarkable how many bullets had <10 deviation units on the shank or ogive, but had boattails that wandered (i.e., >10) Off-center mass is still off-center, wherever it falls. And the boattail is one place it can be common.
Usually, What I'm really interested in is the ogive, which affects drag. Hand-made bullets tend to have the same shank length, or the operator isn't paying attention. But the point depends on the lube, and that can vary. Pretty hard to get the lube even across a long run of bullets.
What I believe, anyway.
Low velocity variations doesn't equal low vertical dispersion, it's only one factor. Two bullets with the same velocity & weight but with slightly different drag will show vertical at 1,000 yards.
To test, you need an Oehler 42 with the microphone "target." Sort by whatever it takes to get low SD on velocity, AND BC (drag). You can tune the load some to get rid of the effects of velocity variations. I don't know of any tuning that will get rid of the effects of variations in drag (B.C.)
First Larry Bartolomew (sp) then Dave Tooley did work on this with a Oehler 42. Dave and I saw a lot of the raw data from Larry's testing, and noticed the tipped bullets had the lowest ES in B.C. Dave began tipping bullets, then went to meplat trimming to achieve the same end -- less ES, albeit a bit lower B.C.
So when anyone talks of "sorting bullets," I kinda tune out, unless they say WHY they are sorting, and have some statistically significant data to back it up. Can it matter? Sure.
But the only variance I've seen with the BIBs 187s is what I mentioned earlier -- a sometimes a slightly different length ogive between different lots, likely due to difference is jackets & lube. So I get lazy, and just be sure I stay within a lot at a match.
YMMV.
I don't sort bullets, at least, not by shank length. Bad habit, I suppose. I shot enough BIBs with ES (not SD) in the <8 region to not worry about velocity variations. The bad habit is I don't always shoot BIBs.
When I sort bullets, I set them up on the Juenke and have the sound head a bit up from the shank/beginning of ogive junction. And what I look at is not deviation, but the number itself -- comparatively. The old Sierra 142 MKs use to give two readings -- you'd sort into two batches. Each shot great, within their own batch. Not if you didn't segregate them, though.
I use to check boattails, too, and that was for deviation (offset mass). It was remarkable how many bullets had <10 deviation units on the shank or ogive, but had boattails that wandered (i.e., >10) Off-center mass is still off-center, wherever it falls. And the boattail is one place it can be common.
Usually, What I'm really interested in is the ogive, which affects drag. Hand-made bullets tend to have the same shank length, or the operator isn't paying attention. But the point depends on the lube, and that can vary. Pretty hard to get the lube even across a long run of bullets.
What I believe, anyway.
Low velocity variations doesn't equal low vertical dispersion, it's only one factor. Two bullets with the same velocity & weight but with slightly different drag will show vertical at 1,000 yards.
To test, you need an Oehler 42 with the microphone "target." Sort by whatever it takes to get low SD on velocity, AND BC (drag). You can tune the load some to get rid of the effects of velocity variations. I don't know of any tuning that will get rid of the effects of variations in drag (B.C.)
First Larry Bartolomew (sp) then Dave Tooley did work on this with a Oehler 42. Dave and I saw a lot of the raw data from Larry's testing, and noticed the tipped bullets had the lowest ES in B.C. Dave began tipping bullets, then went to meplat trimming to achieve the same end -- less ES, albeit a bit lower B.C.
So when anyone talks of "sorting bullets," I kinda tune out, unless they say WHY they are sorting, and have some statistically significant data to back it up. Can it matter? Sure.
But the only variance I've seen with the BIBs 187s is what I mentioned earlier -- a sometimes a slightly different length ogive between different lots, likely due to difference is jackets & lube. So I get lazy, and just be sure I stay within a lot at a match.
YMMV.