There was a report -- I think by Lynn -- that some guys were experiencing distortion of the bullet, as measured with a Jeunke, after closing the points.
Which kinda scared me, as I've been doing this as of last year. So I got out the Jeunke & measured 20 of the repointed 187 BIBs I have left over from last year. 12 showed 2 unit deviation or less, 8 showed between 2 and 4. Ran the Jeunke at a fairly slow speed, so the needle was allowed full swing. Well, 20 is a real small sample size, but it is completely consistent with the the numbers I get with an unaltered BIBs.
[Aside: Since I had the machine out, I ran 300 unaltered BIBs during the game last night. All 300 showed less than 4 deviation units. So as not to waste my time, I grouped them according to the absolute measurement, which is another way of measuring the bearing surface. Again, I used a 4 unit increment to sort by. Got one big group, two smaller groups right next to it (probably not necessary), and a few outliers.]
Anyway, back to pointing: I trim first, then point, then trim again. Nothing fancy, and I doubt my technique is superior to anyone else's. It would be interesting to hear the details of bullets that were deformed when repointed.
Which kinda scared me, as I've been doing this as of last year. So I got out the Jeunke & measured 20 of the repointed 187 BIBs I have left over from last year. 12 showed 2 unit deviation or less, 8 showed between 2 and 4. Ran the Jeunke at a fairly slow speed, so the needle was allowed full swing. Well, 20 is a real small sample size, but it is completely consistent with the the numbers I get with an unaltered BIBs.
[Aside: Since I had the machine out, I ran 300 unaltered BIBs during the game last night. All 300 showed less than 4 deviation units. So as not to waste my time, I grouped them according to the absolute measurement, which is another way of measuring the bearing surface. Again, I used a 4 unit increment to sort by. Got one big group, two smaller groups right next to it (probably not necessary), and a few outliers.]
Anyway, back to pointing: I trim first, then point, then trim again. Nothing fancy, and I doubt my technique is superior to anyone else's. It would be interesting to hear the details of bullets that were deformed when repointed.