Like I said in my last post, if the bullet doesn't move first, how comes more tension tunes a gun? What you said Tom makes sense to me. I also see where more tension gives me better long range accuracy. This is with both the 300 WSM and the Dasher. I believe you would get carbon on the neck either way because the neck springs back after release. Matt
You poised a good question Wilber. I don't know the answer but I do know at 1000 yards bullet tension can tune a gun. I am not sure if the short range guys see this or not. I am a in the lands shooter and tend to use more tension then most. One reason is to hold the bullet so it doesn't slip, and also so I can open the bolt in a ceasefire. I always measure to make sure my bullets aren't moving after closing the bolt. I always take them back out and measure them again. They don't move at lighter tension but shoot better at more tension. So it is not a matter of bullet movement from closing the bolt. MattYou've posed a "deal" that doesn't seem to have any basis but it does seem to work. "Seem" being the very key word. Does increased neck tension cause the case neck to resist expansion or does it just make the bullet harder to seat? Does increased neck tension correct an unrelated issue such as bullet jam into the rifling?
Anyone trying to tune for maximum accuracy soon funds out that neck tension DOES matter. Try tuning a barrel using varying jam and varying neck tension.
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