Pete Wass
Well-known member
I loaded 100 rounds of .223 this week and when I was seating bullets I observed a large variation in the OAL's measured near the base of the ogive. I segregated them by OAL and discovered that they generally fell into 4 groups. I ended up re-adjusting the seater stem for each group until I had them all the same length. I had to pull the bullets on some to get back where they belonged. ( great reason to have a good bullet puller in your press turret )
It appears to me that the bullets were either made by 4 seperate machines or they were made in 4 different runs and mixed. These are Sierra 69g Match King bullets. I must say I am not particularly pleased.
If a person were to shoot them without measuring, their accuracy is likely to be lackluster, at best. Some were .009 short, some were .006 long, some, 003 short with some the correct length I had set the seater for. I am surprised the QC isn't better than this.
It appears to me that the bullets were either made by 4 seperate machines or they were made in 4 different runs and mixed. These are Sierra 69g Match King bullets. I must say I am not particularly pleased.
If a person were to shoot them without measuring, their accuracy is likely to be lackluster, at best. Some were .009 short, some were .006 long, some, 003 short with some the correct length I had set the seater for. I am surprised the QC isn't better than this.