B
bill123
Guest
I’m a prone shooter working on improving my 1000 yard precision. I just started annealing and processed my 3x fired 308 Lapua brass with a Bench Source annealer. All signs (tempilaq, flame color changing) were correct and the maker of the Bench Source assures me that I am doing the annealing properly.
At 100 yards, my un-annealed brass was giving me 3/8" groups. My annealed brass is now giving me 3/4" groups. I went back to the un-annealed brass and shot a few groups, just now to see if the 3/4" groups were me or the brass. I got 3/8" groups so I'm assuming the problem is the brass.
I neck turn my brass to .014”
My fired case necks are .340” diam.
Neck diam. of finished cartridge w/ bullet: .3355"
Bullets are .3075” measured diam.
I resize with bushing dies in 2 steps .336” then .332”.
My Sinclair mandrel measures 3.055” diam.
After expanding my cases, the neck diameter is .3335” (.002” neck tension)
The maker of the Bench Source unit recommended that I try different bushings to see if that brings the groups back down.
I loaded and shot 2 sets of brass. One with a .331” bushing and one with a .330” bushing. The precision with the .330” bushing was better but not great.
Has anyone experienced this before?
Should I continue to test with smaller bushings?
At what point and I over working the brass because I have used too small a bushing?
In other words, did the annealing make my brass so soft that I had to over size in order to get my rounds to shoot as well as they did before annealing?
One more thing, prior to annealing I was using an ultrasonic cleaner to clean the brass but I switched to SS tumbling at the same time that I started annealing. I know, I should have made one change at a time.
At 100 yards, my un-annealed brass was giving me 3/8" groups. My annealed brass is now giving me 3/4" groups. I went back to the un-annealed brass and shot a few groups, just now to see if the 3/4" groups were me or the brass. I got 3/8" groups so I'm assuming the problem is the brass.
I neck turn my brass to .014”
My fired case necks are .340” diam.
Neck diam. of finished cartridge w/ bullet: .3355"
Bullets are .3075” measured diam.
I resize with bushing dies in 2 steps .336” then .332”.
My Sinclair mandrel measures 3.055” diam.
After expanding my cases, the neck diameter is .3335” (.002” neck tension)
The maker of the Bench Source unit recommended that I try different bushings to see if that brings the groups back down.
I loaded and shot 2 sets of brass. One with a .331” bushing and one with a .330” bushing. The precision with the .330” bushing was better but not great.
Has anyone experienced this before?
Should I continue to test with smaller bushings?
At what point and I over working the brass because I have used too small a bushing?
In other words, did the annealing make my brass so soft that I had to over size in order to get my rounds to shoot as well as they did before annealing?
One more thing, prior to annealing I was using an ultrasonic cleaner to clean the brass but I switched to SS tumbling at the same time that I started annealing. I know, I should have made one change at a time.