Thick v. Thin
Eric:
Wow! Please do not misunderstand. I SHOOT BERGERS. I am very happy with the product and have set a 600 yd NRA prone record with them as well as a Sr. Division NRA 1000 yd prone record (the first record lasted about 30 days and the second was broken in February by Bud Solis in the AZ long range championships). I am not saying the Thick jackets are not good bullets, I am saying that the pre-shoot numbers are NOT as good.
As an example, a certain lot of 155.5 (I will keep that lot # to myself
varried a max of .003 base to ogive on a digital Buhay bar/.001 dial/granite base comparator. The OAL also varried no more than .003 on digital calipers. The Junke numbers (for what that is worth -- another issue) run about 6, which is very good. The bullets in that lot pointed up beautifully because they were so uniform before I began the process. A small drill bit I use as a pin gauge indicates a uniformity of meplat closure. They all looked (almost) exactly the same at the tip of the meplat and at the transition to the meplat (I have a large bullet board that I place the pointed bullets in base down so that I can view and compare the array from the top). They sounded the same when closing and they felt the same while closing. They shot 200 cleans at 1000 under poor light conditions with X counts in the teens. They shot 1.5 minutes BETTER than the "other" top of the line "Palma" bullet. In short, there is no question in my mind that the 155.5 Berger is the best "Palma" bullet on the line -- out of the box or prepped. I will leave out the numbers on the "other" bullet as that is a sensitive topic at this time. But I will say that the Bergers did not have to be sorted.
Now, Lot 1564 Thick measure about .016 to .024 longer than another Lot of standard J4 jackets, Lot # 1812 (not the coveted Lot spoken of). Just as a reference, the Pindell closing die adjusted for a full closure on Lot 1564 would only barely touch the meplat on Lot 1812. The variations go on from there.
I do not mean to imply that the Thicks in question will not shoot as well at 1000, i.e., group, score, waterline vertical. I don't yet know. But, if I had the array of numbers in front of me prior to the purchase of a certain Lot of bullets, I would take the Lot with the best numbers to shoot. If I did not discriminate on the pre-shoot numbers, I would be telling myself that NOTHING MATTERS but the Indian pulling the trigger. That is an ongoing theme in Long Range prone (unfortunate) but NOT in F-Class where the smaller target DEMANDS precision. As an aside, Long Range prone used to influence F-Class. Now, with the smaller target, more prone shooters are understanding the need for precision loading, and F-Class has had a significant influence on prone. Of course, the 1000 yd BR folks have known this all along. BUT, if I had blown up a bullet in a big match -- all bets would be off, and I would go Moly or Thick or both, and sort if I had to. A blown bullet sends you home in a mood that is not appreciated by your spouse or the family pets.
I respectfully have no desire to return bullets to Berger. They are just fine. The Thicks are just NOT as uniform as the Thins -- in my testing. I also, respectfully have no desire to turn the table on myself (not that the table was ever turned on Berger) by having to account for all the specs of my measuring gear, etc. This is really very simple stuff as measuring various lengths is fundamental and most shooters on this board have the gear. Heck, I noted that Lot 1564 Thicks had several bad folds out of the 1000 -- the first 100 of Lot 1812 had two in the first box yet the numbers in that Lot were better than the 1564 Lot.
The observations I shared were my observations from pretty intense inspection. However, the same could be duplicated by anyone. The only point I am trying to convey is that "I" have seen a difference in the end product of the Thicks v. Thin with the Thins winning. Is it a distinction without a difference? With the 7mm pills, there is a difference in performance at the target. With the 155.5 or any other Thicks, I don't yet know.
If any of my comments have been taken as criticisms of Berger, that would be a wrong assumption. I have only pointed out my meager findings. I know Charles E. very well and he is VERY discriminating and you have to PROVE issues to him. His approach is healthy as he considered my findings as "some evidence" in making his decision between Thicks and Thins. He will do his own testing no matter what anyone says!
In short, if the collective "we" do not bring up issues for consideration, then we are subject to be drinking the "cool aid" on a leap of faith. I want to see someone else take a "drink" before I follow. So, until someone like John Whidden, Mid, Michelle, Sherry, Nancy, Bryan and a Joel Pendergraft say that the Thicks shoot as well FOR THEM as the Thins, I will have to take my own findings as "some evidence" that will make me go Thin.
The ongoing efforts of Berger and yourself to answer tough questions and educate the shooting community has no equal -- and none of us have ever seen this before. I hope my one-man-findings are food for thought and help in the overall scheme of things. My intention was to leave a "mark" based on my findings, not a "stain" based on the same. To the extent that I have fallen short, I need to stay off the stink'n shooting boards with MY limited
opinions.
Two quick questions (I can't help myself as I don't know the answers):
1) If the Thicks weigh the same as the Thins, where is the "other stuff" displaced to make the same weight?
2) Is that displacement of the "other stuff" a factor that manifests itself on the target at 1000 yards, i.e., can you shoot the difference?
Keep up the great work,
Jim Hardy