How much do the various type of dies affect the potential accuracy of the ammo produced with them?
If one has a factory rifle I strongly suspect he would not see any difference in accuracy from a set of BR grade bushing dies then their std die set. What about a well re-barreled rifle with a snug chamber? A good varmint rifle, Cooper maybe as a example? I am I guess wondering if it is worth the expense of a top grade die to feed the non top end benchrest rifles most of us non-top ranked shooters own and shoot, or do the little guys see a improvement too? Where does it reach a point of diminished return?
I'd rather spend my $$ on components and practice then fancy tools if it will do as much good. I long ago gave up the belief I could buy consistent 0.2" groups at my skill level, but if I could get the couple of rifles that now give 0.4"/0.5" with some regularity to do it consistently I might bite.
BTW I now use mostly Foster BR dies with a few std Reddings. All full size.
If one has a factory rifle I strongly suspect he would not see any difference in accuracy from a set of BR grade bushing dies then their std die set. What about a well re-barreled rifle with a snug chamber? A good varmint rifle, Cooper maybe as a example? I am I guess wondering if it is worth the expense of a top grade die to feed the non top end benchrest rifles most of us non-top ranked shooters own and shoot, or do the little guys see a improvement too? Where does it reach a point of diminished return?
I'd rather spend my $$ on components and practice then fancy tools if it will do as much good. I long ago gave up the belief I could buy consistent 0.2" groups at my skill level, but if I could get the couple of rifles that now give 0.4"/0.5" with some regularity to do it consistently I might bite.
BTW I now use mostly Foster BR dies with a few std Reddings. All full size.