Quoted from: VARMINT HUNTER MAGAZINE – WINTER, 2012 PAGE 168
“Any charge near a 100-percent filling ratio is likely to be inaccurate. Decades ago, the late Mr. Delaney, working as chief ballistician at Hercules, recognized this problem. Any such load is apt to create cartridges of two basic types: first, those where the charge settles a bit more than average and where the charge is therefore uncompressed after bullet seating; second, those where the charge settles a bit less than average and where the charge is therefore compressed during bullet seating. Cartridges from such loads are well-known for shooting into separate groups.”
I had never heard this before. Is this "old news?"
Harold
“Any charge near a 100-percent filling ratio is likely to be inaccurate. Decades ago, the late Mr. Delaney, working as chief ballistician at Hercules, recognized this problem. Any such load is apt to create cartridges of two basic types: first, those where the charge settles a bit more than average and where the charge is therefore uncompressed after bullet seating; second, those where the charge settles a bit less than average and where the charge is therefore compressed during bullet seating. Cartridges from such loads are well-known for shooting into separate groups.”
I had never heard this before. Is this "old news?"
Harold